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Cornplanter in Disrepute
Not long after the large
sale of their domain to Robert Morris, which
had been negotiated at Big Tree, the Seneca
began to realize that they had committed a
great mistake. The broad lands, mountain,
hill, and valley, over which they had
roamed, the springs and streams of water by
whose side they had been wont to encamp, and
above all the graves of their sires, where
affection's altar had been hallowed by their
sighs and tears, these were still in view,
but they appeared not as in days gone by, to
wear for them the smiles of old and long
tried friends. They seemed to present a look
and utter a voice of reproach, as though
chiding them for having broken in upon the
harmony of those time honored arrangements,
which had bound them together, and the
thought of this filled their minds with
anxiety and grief. Had they been aware of
the sorrow they would experience in looking
upon these lands, as no longer their own,
their consent to part with them would not so
readily have been given.
The reverse which thereupon took place in their minds,
fell heavily on those who had taken the most active part of the
business of selling their country.
Cornplanter, having borne a prominent part in these
proceedings, fell deeply under the displeasure of his people.
Their displeasure was so marked as to lead him to cast about for
some means of relief. Aware of the credulity and superstition of
his people, he resolved to avail himself of these
characteristics of his nation, to accomplish the end he had in
view.
For this purpose he was in consultation with his
brother Ga-ne-o-di-yo, who on one occasion terminated a scene of
great dissipation, by the announcement that he had been
delegated by the Great Spirit, with a new revelation, and with
supernatural gifts. A severe illness became the occasion during
which he made a visit to the unseen world, where visions and
revelations of a most extraordinary nature, had been made known
to him. The happiness of the good, and the tortures of the
wicked, had thus become matters of personal observation. The
announcement of these, in language and gesture indicating his
assurance of their reality, gained for him credence among the
people, as well as chiefs of his nation, and he was received as
a prophet.
His earliest attempts were successful in accomplishing
a desirable reform, especially among the Onondaga, the most
profligate of the Six Nations, from the degrading vice of
intemperance. His influence in this direction was salutary, and
had he confined his efforts to the recovery of his people from
drunkenness, his mission would truly have been one of mercy, and
his career might have terminated with the highest usefulness and
honor.
But sympathizing with Cornplanter, his brother, he
conceived the idea of instituting against their enemies, the
charge of "witchcraft". In this the Indians generally believed,
and a charge of this nature, coming from such a source, was a
very grave matter. Through the instrumentality of Congress
selected by himself, the sentence of death was procured against
certain "familiars of Satan," and this sentence would have been
executed, had there been no interference, from the knowledge of
it coming to the whites, living in the vicinity.
In no way discouraged, but rather emboldened by their
success, they proceeded so far as to bring such a charge against
Red Jacket himself, who was thus publicly denounced, at a great
council held at Buffalo Creek, and put upon trial.
A degree of rivalry had hitherto existed between
Cornplanter and Red Jacket, and as the former descended in the
estimation of his people, for the part he had taken in the sale
of their lands, the latter rose for the same reason, so that the
highest aim of Cornplanter was reached, when he could, by this
means, affect materially the character, and influence of his
distinguished rival.
The orator was thus placed in circumstances the most
critical and trying, of any that had hitherto met him in life.
He perceived at a glance, that his entire history in the future,
would depend on the decision that would then and there take
place. He might be doomed, if his life were spared, and this was
not altogether certain, to be the victim of surmises and
superstitions, that would be annoying, if they did not prove to
be utterly destructive of his happiness. He accordingly summoned
himself for an effort as great, as his position was dangerous.
He conducted the trial in his own defense. In this he
exhibited the exceeding wariness, which was ever a prominent
characteristic of his nature. The slightest circumstance
affecting the character, or bearing suspiciously upon his
adversary was not overlooked, and his history was scanned with
the searching scrutiny of a mind, that seemed to grasp
intuitively, the secret springs, which had influenced his
conduct. One by one the professions that had formed his garb of
sanctity, were exposed to the burning power of his keen satire,
and step by step he advanced to a point, where, from the full
assurance he had established this conviction in the minds of his
people, he pronounced him AN IMPOSTER,--A CHEAT84.
His speech riveted the attention of his hearers for
nearly three hours. He prevailed. "THE IRON BROW OF SUPERSTITION
RELENTED UNDER THE MAGIC POWER OF HIS ELOQUENCE." The Indians
divided and a majority appeared in his favor.
"Perhaps, "says the distinguished author just quoted,
"the annals of history cannot furnish a more conspicuous
instance of the triumph and power of oratory, in a barbarous
nation, devoted to superstition, and looking up to the accuser
as a delegated minister of the Almighty85."
The victory which Red Jacket thus achieved recoiled
heavily on Cornplanter, and gave him a blow, from which he never
afterward fully recovered. He retired to his reservation, on the
waters of the Alleghany river, within the boundaries of
Pennsylvania, where he devoted himself, during the remainder of
his long life, to the elevation and improvement of his people.
He did not, after the example of his great rival Red Jacket,
spurn the improvements of civilization, but engaged in
agriculture after the example of the whites, and welcomed to his
abode the teachers of Christianity, and himself openly avowed
his belief in its doctrines.
Cornplanter was a native of Ca-na-wan-gus, on the
Genesee river, a half breed, the son of an Indian trader, from
the valley of the Mohawk, a white man named John O'Bail. Of his
early life little is known further than he himself intimated, in
a letter written long afterward, to the governor of
Pennsylvania:--In which he said,--"When I was a child I played
with the butterfly, the grasshopper, and the frogs; and as I
grew up, I began to pay some attention, and play with the Indian
boys in the neighborhood; and they took notice of my skin, being
a different color from theirs and spoke about it. I inquired of
my mother the cause, and she told me that my father was a
resident in Albany. I still ate my victuals out of a bark dish.
I grew up to be a young man, and married me a wife, and I had no
kettle or gun. I then knew where my father lived, and went to
see him, and found he was a white man, and spoke the English
language. He gave me victuals, while I was at his house, but
when I started to return home, he gave me no provision to eat on
the way. He gave me neither kettle or gun."
He was with his people when they fought in alliance
with the French in the year 1755. The principal part of the
force which met and defeated the English under General Braddock
was Indian, and it was through their prowess mainly, if not
entirely, that the victory was gained.
What part Cornplanter took in that engagement is not
known, but in the war of the Revolution, he was a war-chief, and
ranked high in the estimation of his people.
In a speech addressed to President Washington in 1790,
he related the manner in which the Indians came to be in
alliance with the English.
"Many nations inhabited this country; but they had no
wisdom, therefore they warred together. The Six Nations were
powerful and compelled them to peace; the lands to a great
extent were given up to them; the French came among us and built
Niagara; they became our fathers and took care of us. Sir
William Johnson came and took that fort from the French; he
became our father and promised to take care of us, and did so
until you were too strong for his king.
"When you kindled your thirteen fires separately, the
wise men that assembled at them told us that you were all
brothers, the children of one great father, who regarded the red
people also as his children. They called us brothers, and
invited us to his protection; they told us that he resided
beyond the great water, where the sun first rises; that he was a
king whose power no people could resist, and that his goodness
was as bright as that sun. What they said went to our hearts; we
accepted the invitation, and promised to obey him. What the
Seneca Nation promise, they faithfully perform; and when you
refused obedience to that king, he commanded us to assist his
beloved men, in making you sober. In obeying him we did no more
than yourselves had led us to promise. The men that claimed this
promise told us that you were children, and had no guns; that
when they had shaken you, you would submit. We hearkened to them
and were deceived."
As a leader he was very active and brave, and as a
partisan of the English, bore a prominent part in all of the
principal engagements, in which the Indians were concerned
during that war. He was on the war-path with Brant during the
campaign of General Sullivan against the Indian towns in the
Genesee country in 1779, and also when under the command of
Brant and Sir John Johnson, the Indians subsequently avenged the
invasion of Sullivan, by the fearful destruction they wrought in
the valley of the Mohawk.
It was during this expedition that Cornplanter visited
his father a second time. He was residing then in the vicinity
of Fort Plain, and ascertaining where he lived, Cornplanter
watched his opportunity and made his father a prisoner, but
managed so adroitly, as to avoid recognition. He marched his
sire ten or twelve miles up the river, and then stepped in front
of him, faced about, and addressed him in the following manner:
"My name is John O'Bail, commonly called Cornplanter. I
am your son! You are my father! You are now my prisoner, and
subject to the customs of Indian warfare. But you shall not be
harmed: you need not fear. I am a warrior! Many are the scalps I
have taken! Many the prisoners I have tortured to death! I am
your son! I was anxious to see you, and greet you in friendship.
I went to your cabin, and took you by force. But your life shall
be spared. Indians love their friends and their kindred, and
treat them with kindness. If now you choose to follow the
fortunes of your yellow son, and to live with our people, I will
cherish your old age with plenty of venison, and you shall live
easy. But if it is your choice to return to your fields, and
live with your white children, I will send a party of my trusty
young men to conduct you back in safety. I respect you, my
father: you have been friendly to Indians, and they are your
friends."
The father preferred to return to his white children,
and was therefore set at liberty, and escorted back in safety to
his own home.
In another address to the governor of Pennsylvania, he
used this language: "I will now tell you, that the Great Spirit
has made known to me that I have been wicked; and the cause was
the Revolutionary war in America. The cause of Indians having
been led into sin, at that time, was that many of them, were in
the practice of drinking and getting intoxicated. Great Britain
requested us to join with them in the conflict against the
Americans, and promised the Indians land and liquor. I myself
was opposed to joining in the conflict, as I had nothing to do
with the difficulty between the two parties.
"They told me they would inform me of the cause of the
Revolution, which I requested them to do minutely. They then
said it was on account of the heavy taxes, imposed on them by
the British government, which had been for fifty years
increasing upon them; that the Americans had grown weary
thereof, and refused to pay, which affronted the king. There had
likewise a difficulty taken place about some tea, which they
wished me not to use, as it had been one of the causes that many
people had lost their lives. And the British government now
being affronted, the war commenced, and the cannons began to
roar in our country.
"The white people who live at Warren, called on me,
some time ago to pay taxes for my land; which I objected to, as
I had never been called upon for that purpose before; and having
refused to pay, the white people became irritated, called upon
me frequently, and at length brought four guns with them, and
seized our cattle. I still refused to pay, and was not willing
to let the cattle go. After a time of dispute, they returned
home, and I understood the militia was ordered out to enforce
the collection of the tax. I went to Warren, and to avert the
impending difficulty, was obliged to give my note for the tax,
the amount of which was forty-three dollars and seventy-nine
cents. It is my desire that the governor will exempt me from
paying taxes for my land to the white people; and also cause
that the money I am now obliged to pay, may be refunded to me,
as I am very poor."
This appeal was brought before the Legislature of
Pennsylvania, and an act was passed by which the chief was
exonerated from the tax.
One writer speaks of him as possessing uncommon genius,
a strong and discriminating mind, and as having the power of
enduring great mental application. He anxiously inquired into
the evidences in support of the scripture account of creation,
and of the scheme of doctrines which Christianity unfolded.
President Alden of Alleghany college, speaks with
delight of a visit he made to the old chief. He found him on the
banks of the Alleghany, on a piece of first rate bottom land, a
little within the limits of Pennsylvania. He was the owner of
thirteen hundred acres of land, on a part of which stood his
village, whose inhabitants gave signs of industry and thrift.
He found it pleasant to behold the agricultural habits
of the place as appeared from the numerous enclosures of
buckwheat, corn and oats. He also speaks of seeing a number of
oxen, cows and horses; and many logs designed for the saw mill,
and the Pittsburgh market. "Cornplanter had for some time been
very much in favor of the Christian religion, and hailed with
joy such as professed it. When apprised of Mr. Alden's arrival
he hastened to welcome him to his village, and to wait upon him.
And notwithstanding his high station as a chief, having many men
under his command, he chose rather, in the ancient patriarchal
style, to serve his visitors himself; he therefore took care of
their horses, and went into the field and cut and brought oats
for them86."
He died at his reservation March 7th, 1836, a hundred
winters having passed over him, and was buried beneath the
sheltering branches of a noble tree standing in his field. No
other monument marks his grave.

84. Conversation of the author with Wm.
Jones, a chief among the Seneca, and a son-in-law of Red Jacket.
85. Governor Clinton's Historical Discourse.
86. Drake's book of the Indians.
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