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Indian Appropriation
While these Indian chiefs
were at Philadelphia, a bill was passed by
Congress, and ratified by the president,
appropriating fifteen hundred dollars
annually, for the benefit of the Iroquois,
in purchasing for them clothing, domestic
animals, implements of husbandry, and for
encouraging useful artificers to reside in
their villages.
They were engaged also to go on a pacific embassy to
the hostile Indians of the West, and assure them of the friendly
disposition of the United States toward them;--that they want
nothing which belongs to the hostile Indians;--that they
appointed commissioners to treat with them for their lands, and
give them a large quantity of goods;--that a number of chiefs
signed the deeds, and from the reports of the commissioners, it
was supposed the lands had been fairly obtained;--that under
this supposition large tracts had been sold, and hence difficult
to restore again; but as the United States desire only what is
just, they will attentively hear the complaints of the western
Indians;--they will re-examine the treaties, and inquire into
the manner in which they were conducted;--and if the complaints
of the western Indians, appear to be well founded, the United
States will make them ample compensation for their lands. They
will do more;--so far from desiring to injure, they would do
them good; they would cheerfully impart to them that knowledge,
and those arts, by which they propose to increase the happiness,
and promote the welfare of the Six Nations.
It was during this visit that President Washington, in
token of his friendship and esteem, gave Red Jacket a large
silver medal bearing his likeness, which he ever after preserved
with much care, and took great pride in wearing.
General Knox, the secretary of war, directed also that
a military suit of clothes be given to each member of the
deputation, including a cocked hat, as worn by the officers of
the United States army. When Red Jacket's suit was presented to
him he eyed it carefully, and rather admiringly, but requested
the bearer to inform General Knox that the suit would hardly
become him, as he was not a war-chief but a sachem, the sachems
being civil, rather than military officers. He desired therefore
that another suit be prepared, which would accord better with
the relation he sustained to his people; at the same time
declaring the one sent very good, and manifesting a disposition
to retain it, until the other was prepared. A plain suit was
accordingly prepared and brought to him, and with this he seemed
to be highly pleased. The bearer tarrying a little, and
manifesting a readiness to carry back the other suit, Red Jacket
coolly and rather playfully remarked, that though the present
suit was more in keeping with his character as sachem, it
nevertheless, occurred sometimes, in cases of emergency, that
the sachems also went to war, and as it would then be very
becoming and proper for him to wear it, he was happy to have one
in case a circumstance of this kind should occur.
These Indian chiefs were all highly gratified with the
attention shown them, during this visit to the general
government. They were especially pleased with the interest that
had been taken in the improvement of their people, and the
pledges they had received of aid in carrying out the benevolent
designs entertained toward them. And they all, Red Jacket with
the rest, were favorably impressed with the views of Washington,
in desiring to introduce among them the improvements of
civilized life.
These conferences were brought to a close on the
thirtieth of April, and President Washington in a concluding
speech, said to them,--"When you return to your country, tell
your nation that it is my desire to promote their prosperity, by
teaching them the use of domestic animals, and the manner that
the white people plough and raise so much corn, and if upon
consideration, it would be agreeable to the nation at large, to
learn those arts, I will find some means of teaching them at
some places within their country, as shall be agreed upon66."
The government had taken special pains also to secure
the attendance of the celebrated
Thayendanegea or Brant, with this deputation of friendly
chiefs. The invitation, though a pressing one, was declined, and
not without reason. For besides the powerful influence exerted
over him by the officers of the British government in Canada,
who strenuously opposed his coming, it has since been
ascertained that he was the leading spirit who directed with so
much success to the Indians, the onslaught upon General St.
Clair's army, the preceding fall. Hence his own feelings could
not have been of the most friendly character. He was,
nevertheless, induced to visit the seat of government during the
month of June following, and pledged himself to exert his
influence in an effort to secure peace for the United States,
with the Indians at the West.
A very large Indian council, composed of delegates from
many and some of them very distant nations, was held at Au
Glaize, on the Miami of Lake Erie, in the autumn of 1792. A
large delegation from the Six Nations, friendly to the United
States, was present and took part in the deliberations. Red
Jacket was the principal speaker, and strenuously advocated the
settlement of their difficulties, by peaceful negotiations
instead of war.
The Shawnee as strenuously advocated the continuance of
hostilities. They taunted the Six Nations with having induced
them to form a great confederacy, a few years before, and of
having come to the council now, "with the voice of the United
States folded under their arm;"--referring to the belt which was
significant of their embassy.
The
Shawnee,
Miami and
Kickapoo were addicted to horse-stealing, and while
hostilities were continued, they reaped from this source, their
greatest harvests.
Captain Brant on account of sickness was unable to be
present, and it may be noticed that from this time on, his
efforts to form a North-western Indian Confederacy, were very
sensibly remitted. He no doubt found there were so many
conflicting interests and national jealousies in the way, as to
render the project comparatively hopeless. But more than all, he
had depended upon the following of the entire body, composed of
the Six Nations, and when he saw them coming largely under the
influence of the United States, he could realize that the
strength and permanence of his contemplated position, were so
seriously affected, as to render its attainment extremely
doubtful. The addition of the entire Iroquois family, to the
proposed confederation, would have brought into it an element of
intellectual superiority, and their long established polity of
acting in concert, would have been of essential service among
forces that were wild and chaotic. And we are not surprised that
the diversion effected among them, should have changed somewhat
the views of the distinguished Thayendanegea.
No decisive action was reached at this council, but an
agreement was made to suspend hostilities during the winter,
provided the United States would withdraw their troops from the
west side of the Ohio; and another council was appointed to meet
at the Miami Rapids during the following spring.
The
Iroquois delegation forwarded to our government a report
of the service they had rendered, the action taken by the
council, and the agreement to meet in the spring, and requested
that agents might be sent, "who were men of honesty, not
land-jobbers, but men who love and desire peace. We also desire
that they may be accompanied by some Friend, or Quaker, to
attend the council."
On the 19th of February, 1793, General Benjamin
Lincoln, Beverly Randolph and Colonel Pickering were
commissioned by the president to attend the great Indian council
at Miami Rapids, in the ensuing spring.
Meanwhile the Indians, dissatisfied with the views of
the president, as transmitted by the Six Nations, held another
council at Au Glaize in February, and framed a very explicit
address to the Six Nations, affirming they would listen to no
proposition from the United States, that did not concede the
Ohio river, as the boundary line between them, and the Indian
country. They desired the United States to be fully apprised of
this, before sending their delegation; and they notified the Six
Nations of a private council at Miami Rapids, before meeting the
American commissioners, to adjust their opinions, so as to speak
but one language at the council; they further declared their
intention not to meet the commissioners at all, until assured
they had authority to conclude a treaty on this basis.
In this determination they were encouraged, and
sustained by the British Indian Department of Canada. President
Washington, in a letter to Mr. Jay, our minister in London,
writing in 1794, very clearly sets forth the work thus
accomplished.--He says:--"There does not remain a doubt, in the
mind of any well informed person in this country, not shut
against conviction, that all the difficulties we encounter with
the Indians, their hostilities, the murder of helpless women and
children, along our frontiers, result from the conduct of agents
of Great Britain in this country. In vain is it then for its
administration in Britain to disavow having given orders which
will warrant such conduct, whilst their agents go unpunished;
while we have a thousand corroborating circumstances, and indeed
as many evidences, some of which cannot be brought forward, to
prove that they are seducing from our alliances, and endeavoring
to remove over the line, tribes that have hitherto been kept in
peace and friendship at great expense, and who have no causes of
complaint, except pretended ones of their creating; whilst they
keep in a state of irritation the tribes that are hostile to us,
and are instigating those who know little of us or we of them,
to unite in the war against us; and whilst it is an undeniable
fact, that they are furnishing the whole with arms, ammunition,
clothing, and even provisions to carry on the war, I might go
farther, and if they are not much belied, add, men in disguise67."
The commissioners of the United States appointed to
confer with the Indian tribes at the West, proceeded on their
way, arriving at Niagara the latter part of May, 1793. Here they
were very kindly entertained by Governor Simcoe until the
council was ready to receive them.
While here they were visited by a large deputation from
the council at Miami Rapids, who desired an explicit answer to
the inquiry whether they were authorized to run and establish a
new boundary? Which they answered in the affirmative, at the
same time reminding the Indians that in almost all disputes
there were wrongs on both sides, and that, at the approaching
council, both parties must expect to make some concessions.
This reply was well received and sanguine hopes were
entertained of a favorable termination of their mission.
The Indians returned again to their council at Miami,
and the commissioners supposing they would now be prepared to
receive them, proceeded on their voyage westward. Arriving at
the mouth of Detroit river they were obliged to land, being
forbidden by the British authorities to proceed any farther
toward the place of meeting.
They were met here by another Indian deputation,
bringing a paper with a written statement of their
determination, to make the Ohio the boundary line between the
Indian country and the United States, and requiring the latter,
if sincere in their desires for peace, to remove their
settlements to the south side of that river. To this the
commissioners were desired to give an explicit written answer.
They replied, referring to the understanding from their
conference at Niagara, that some concessions were to be made on
both sides, and giving a brief history of the treaties by which
a title had been acquired to land north of the Ohio, on the
faith of which, settlements had been formed which could not be
removed; hence they answered explicitly.--"The Ohio river cannot
be designated as the boundary line."
They expressed the hope that negotiations might proceed
on the basis of these treaties, closing with some concessions,
and liberal offers for some lands still held by the Indians.
The debate at this council, it is said, ran high.
Thayendanegea, and others of the Six Nations were strenuous in
their advocacy of peace. The offer of the commissioners to
establish a boundary line that would include the settlements
already made north of the Ohio, they regarded as reasonable, and
that farther concessions ought not to be required. Quite a
number of tribes were influenced to adopt this view, which at
one time it was thought would prevail. But there were certain
ruling spirits present determined to make no concession, and the
council broke up without allowing the commissioners, or any
other white person, not in sympathy with Britain, to be present.
Previous to the holding of this council, the army had
been re-organized under the command of General Anthony Wayne, an
officer of untiring energy and vigilance; a larger number of
soldiers had been called into the field, and as they were placed
under a severe discipline, to inure them to the dangers and
hardships of the campaign, it was undertaken with flattering
prospects of success.
Pittsburgh had been made the place of rendezvous; but
fearing the influence of an encampment near a town, and wishing
to inspire in his soldiers a feeling of self reliance, General
Wayne, on the 27th of November, 1792, marched his army to a
point twenty-two miles distant on the Ohio, which he called
Legionville, fortifying it and taking up his quarters there for
the winter.
On the 30th of April, 1793, as spring had opened, he
broke up his garrison at Legionville, and led his army down the
river, to Fort Washington, its site being that of the present
beautiful and flourishing city of Cincinnati.
Here he remained while the negotiations were going on
with the Indians at the West. As soon as they were ended and the
result known, he took a more advanced position, marching in
October in the direction pursued by, General St. Clair, to a
point on the south-west branch of the Miami, six miles beyond
Fort Jefferson, and eighty from Fort Washington, which he
fortified and called Greenville.
On the 23d of December, a detachment of the army
commanded by Major Burbeck took possession of the ground where
the army of General St. Clair, two years before on the 4th of
the preceding November, had sustained a terrible defeat. Here
they gathered up sadly and sacredly the bones that marked this
as a place of human slaughter, put in order the field-pieces
that were still upon the ground, served them with a round of
three times three, over the remains of their fallen comrades,
and erected a fortress, appropriately naming it Fort Recovery.
The army at different points had skirmishes with the
enemy that were not serious, but they served to create
confidence and inspire courage in the minds of the soldiers.
It was not until the 20th of August, 1794, that General
Wayne had a regular engagement with the Indians. Yet like a true
gladiator he had been preparing for the struggle, and his
wariness, which had gained for him the title of "Black Snake"
may be gathered from the speech of
Little Turtle, chief of the Miami, and one of the most
active and brave warriors of his time. He counselled his
countrymen to think favorably of the proposals of peace offered
by General Wayne before giving them battle; saying,--"We have
beaten the enemy twice under separate commanders. We cannot
expect the same good fortune always to attend us. The Americans
are now led by a chief who never sleeps. The night and the day
are alike to him; and during all the time he has been marching
on our villages, notwithstanding the watchfulness of our young
men, we have never been able to surprise him. There is something
that whispers to me,--it would be prudent to listen to his
offers of peace."
But this counsel was rejected by the Indians, who
determined to give battle to the Americans the next day. They
fought in the vicinity of a British fort, which Governor Simcoe
of Canada had caused to be erected at the foot of the rapids of
the Miami emptying into the lakes, far within the acknowledged
territory of the United States.
The ground occupied by the Indians was well chosen,
being a thick wood, where were old fallen trees that marked the
track of some ancient hurricane, where the use of cavalry would
be impracticable, a place suited to afford them shelter and well
adapted to their peculiar mode of warfare. But the order of
General Wayne to advance with trailed arms, and rouse the
Indians from their covert at the point of the bayonet, and when
up deliver a close and well directed fire on their backs,
followed by a brisk charge, so as not to give them time to load
again; was executed so promptly, and with so much effect that
the Indians were driven in one hour more than two miles, and
soon dispersed in terror and dismay, leaving the ground in full
and quiet possession of the victorious army.
This battle, which terminated within reach of the
British guns, decided the fate of the campaign. The Indians
after this were dispirited and unable to make a general rally.
The distrust awakened by the coolness of their supposed friends,
the gates of whose fort remained unopened while they were
fleeing thither for a covert, served not less than the victory
to dishearten them, and incline their thoughts toward peace.
The few days spent by the army on the battle ground
after its victory, were occupied in destroying the property of
the Indians in that vicinity, including also the extensive
possessions of Colonel McKee, an officer of the British Indian
Department, whose influence had been exerted in promoting these
hostilities, whose effects were now being experienced. The fort
itself was poised in the General's mind, as was also the torch
of the gunner, who was only restrained by his commanding officer
from firing upon Wayne, who, as he thought came too near, in
making his observations on one of His Majesty's forts. Prudence
prevailed. The fighting was confined to a war of words in a
spirited correspondence between General Wayne, and the officer
in command of the fort.
General Wayne after laying waste their principal towns
in this region, continued in the Indian country during the
following year, bringing his campaign to a close by a treaty
with the North-western tribes, which was entirely agreeable to
the wishes of the United States.

66. Irving's Life of Washington.
67. Marshall's Washington.
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