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How Red Jacket Got His Name
The name Red Jacket, so
familiar to the whites, was acquired during
the war of the Revolution. He was
distinguished at this time as well as
afterward, for his fleetness on foot, his
intelligence and activity. Having attracted
the attention of a British officer by the
vivacity of his manners, and the speedy
execution of those errands with which he was
entrusted, he received either in token of
admiration, or for services rendered, or
both, a beautifully ornamented jacket of a
scarlet color.
This he took pride in wearing, and when worn out, he
was presented with another, and continued to wear this peculiar
dress until it became a mark of distinction, and gave him the
name by which he was afterward best known. At a treaty held at
Canandaigua in 1794, Captain Parrish, who was for many years
agent of the United States for the Indians, presented him with
another "red jacket" to perpetuate a name of which he was
particularly fond22.
His original name was Oti-ti-ani, "always ready".
Sa-go-ye-wat-ha, the title conferred upon him at his election to
the dignity of Sachem, has been rendered, "The keeper awake, he
keeps them awake, and the author, or cause of a wakeful spirit23."
The name is connected with a curious superstition among
his people, and will best be understood, by an acquaintance with
the circumstances under which it is used.
If during the still hours of night, an Indian's mind is
taken up with thoughts that cause sleep to pass from him,
preventing every effort of Morpheus to lock him in fond embrace,
he ascribes it to a spirit, which he calls Sa-go-ye-wat-ha.
The impressions made are regarded as ominous of some
important event, joyful or otherwise, according to the feelings
awakened. If his thoughts are of a pleasing nature, he is led to
anticipate the occurrence of some joyful event. If they are of a
melancholy turn, he regards it as foreboding evil.
He may be led to dwell with interest on some absent
friend; that friend he will expect to see the next day, or soon
after. Yet should his thoughts be troubled or anxious, he would
expect to hear soon of that friend's death, or that something
evil had befallen him24.
Such was the spirit they called Sa-go-ye-wat-ha. He
could arrest the current of their thought, bring before them
visions of delight, or send upon them melancholy reflections,
and fill their minds with anxiety and gloom.
This title conferred on Red Jacket, while it indicated
the cause of his elevation, presented the highest compliment
that could be paid to his powers of oratory. By the magic spell
of his words, he could control their minds, make their hearts
beat quick with emotions of joy, or send over them at will the
deep pulsations of grief.
The incident referred to as giving rise to the
name, Red Jacket, introduces him in connection with the war of
the Revolution. As his conduct during this period has been the
subject of frequent remark, severely criticised by some, and not
very favorably viewed by others, justice to the orator's memory
requires a brief statement of his reasons for the course he
pursued.
While thoughts of this contest were pending, the
colonists took measures to secure the favorable disposition of
the Iroquois, and these efforts at the time were successful.
The general government advised them to remain neutral,
during the anticipated conflict. This course met the approval of
their most considerate sachems. For though inured to war, and
apt to enter with avidity into the excitement of a conflict,
their forces had been reduced by recent encounters with the
Indians at the west, and south, and also with the French; and
the few intervening years of peace served to convince them of
its value, and caused them to receive with favor this
proposition from our government.
At a council held with the Iroquois at German Flats, in
June, 1776, by Gen. Schuyler, who had been appointed for this
purpose, these assurances of neutrality were renewed.
Great Britain also was not indifferent about the course
these Indian tribes would pursue. Wishing to prevent an alliance
of the Indians with the colonists, willing to secure forces
already on the ground, and with a view possibly, of striking
terror into the minds of her rebellious subjects, her agents in
this country spared no pains to enlist the sympathies of the
Iroquois on her side.
In this they were but too successful. Through their
agents, Britain had been in correspondence with these tribes for
more than a hundred years, had supplied them with implements of
war, articles of clothing, and with many of the comforts and
conveniences of life. The Indians had learned to be dependent
upon her, and they called her king their "great father over the
water." Her agents spent their lives among them. Through them
their communications were made to the crown, and they regarded
them as essential to their happiness. Hence they exerted a very
great influence over them.
This was especially true of Sir William Johnson, who
died at Johnson Hall in the month of June, 1774.
Mr. Johnson was a native of Ireland, of a good family
and fitted by nature and education, to adorn the walks of
civilized life. He came to this country not far from 1738, as
land agent of his uncle, Sir Peter Warren, an admiral in the
English navy, who had acquired a considerable tract of land upon
the Mohawk, in the present county of Montgomery.
Possessing a romantic disposition, he readily adapted
himself to the rude customs that prevailed in the wilds of
America.
The "Gentleman's Magazine" of London said of him in
1755,--"Besides his skill and experience as an officer, he is
particularly happy in making himself beloved by all sorts of
people, and can conform to all companies and to all
conversations. He is very much of a gentleman in genteel
company, but as the inhabitants next to him are mostly Dutch, he
sits down with them and smokes his tobacco, drinks flip, and
talks of improvements, bear and beaver skins. Being surrounded
with Indians, he speaks several of their languages well, and has
always some of them with him. He takes care of their wives, and
old Indians, when they go out on parties; and even wears their
dress. In short, by his honest dealings with them in trade, and
his courage, which has often been successfully tried with them,
he has so endeared himself to them, that they chose him as one
of their chief sachems, or princes, and esteem him as their
father."
Not far from the year 1755, while the French and
English were at war, he was made general of the colonial
militia, and by virtue of a leadership that had been created by
the Iroquois, he was head warrior of all the Indian tribes, who
favored the English.
The gifts of his sovereign, and the opportunity he had
of purchasing Indian lands, were the means of his securing great
wealth. The ease with which he secured land of the Indians is
illustrated by an amusing occurrence between him and a noted
chief, Hendrick. Soon after entering upon his duties as
Superintendent of Indian Affairs in this country, he received
from England some richly embroidered suits of clothes.
Hendrick, a Mohawk chief, was present, when the package
containing them was opened, and could not refrain from
expressing his admiration of them. He went away very thoughtful,
but soon after returned and said to Sir William, that he had
dreamed a dream.
"Ah! And what did you dream?" said Sir William.
"I dreamed," said Hendrick, "that you gave me one of
those new suits of uniform."
Sir William could not refuse it, and one of the elegant
suits was presented to Hendrick, who went away to show his gift
to his countrymen and left Sir William to tell the joke to his
friends. A while after the general met Hendrick and said--"Hendrick,
I have dreamed a dream."
Whether the Sachem mistrusted he was now to be taken in
his own net or not, is not certain, but he also inquired,--"And
what did you dream?"
The general said he dreamed that Hendrick presented him
with a certain piece of land which he described. It consisted of
about five hundred acres, of the most valuable land in the
Mohawk valley.
Hendrick replied,--"It is yours;" but, shaking his
head, said, "Sir William I will never dream with you again25."
Sir William's large estate, the partiality of his
countrymen, together with his military honors, and his great
influence with the Indians, rendered him "as near a prince as
anything the back-woods of America has witnessed26."
He built two spacious and convenient residences on the
Mohawk river, known as Johnson Castle and Johnson Hall. The Hall
was his summer residence. Here he lived something like a
sovereign, kept an excellent table for strangers and officers,
whom the course of duty led into these wilds, and by confiding
entirely in the Indians, and treating them with truth and
justice, never yielding to solicitations once refused, they were
taught to repose in him the utmost confidence.
His personal popularity with the Indians, gave him an
influence over them greater it is supposed, than any one of our
own race has ever possessed. He was the first Englishman that
contended successfully with French Indian diplomacy, as
exercised by their governors, missionaries and traders27.
Had he lived until the war of the Revolution, it is
supposed by some he might have remained neutral, and have kept
the Indians from engaging in the conflict, though this is
altogether uncertain. He lived to see the gathering of the storm
that swept away most of his great possessions.
On the death of Sir William, his son John Johnson
succeeded to his titles and estate. The office of General
Superintendent of the Indians, fell into the hands of Col. Guy
Johnson, a son-in-law, who appointed Col. Claus, another
son-in-law, as his deputy.
Into their hands fell the property, and a large share
of the influence over the Indians, possessed by Sir William
Johnson. This influence was exerted in favor of Great Britain.
When the Indians heard of the uprising in Boston, and
of the battle of Lexington, they were told, that these
out-breaks were the acts of disobedient children, against the
great king, who had been kind to them, as he had to the Six
Nations. That their "great father over the water," was rich in
money and men; that the colonists were poor, and their numbers
small, and that they could easily be brought into subjection.
At a council of the Iroquois convened at Oswego, by Sir
John Johnson and other officers and friends of the crown, they
were informed that the king desired them to assist him in
subduing the rebels, who had taken up arms against him, and were
about to rob him of a part of his great possessions.
But the chiefs one by one assured the British agents
that they had the year before, in a council with General
Schuyler, pledged themselves to neutrality, and could not
without violating their promise, take up the hatchet.
But they were assured that the rebels justly merited
all the punishment that white men and Indians could
inflict;--that they would be richly rewarded for their services,
and "that the king's rum was as plenty as the waters of Lake
Ontario".
This appeal to their appetites, already vitiated,
together with the promise of large rewards, at length prevailed;
and a treaty was concluded, in which the Indians pledged
themselves to take up arms against the rebels, and continue in
service during the war. They were then presented each with a
suit of clothes, a brass kettle, a gun, a tomahawk, a scalping
knife, a quantity of powder and lead, and a piece of gold28.
The Seneca were among those who consented to join the
royal standard. Of this action Red Jacket did not approve. He
declared plainly and unhesitatingly to those who had determined
to engage in the war,--"This quarrel does not belong to us,--and
it is test for us to take no part in it; we need not waste our
blood to have it settled. If they fight us, we will fight them,
but if they let us alone, we had better keep still29."
Red Jacket at this time was not far from twenty-six
years old. His forensic abilities had not been called forth, and
his influence weighed but little in comparison with that of
older men. But it may be observed that his conduct ever after
this, will be found consistent with the sentiments he
entertained, and was free to express. Though young, his
perceptions were keen, he had a deep and penetrating mind and
saw at a glance that in this contest his people were doomed to
suffer, to be ground between the upper and nether mill stone.
When, in the summer of 1777, his people received an
invitation to join the forces that were preparing to march under
the command of Col. St. Leger upon Fort Stanwix, being assured
that they would not be required to endure the fatigues and
dangers of the battle, but might "sit down quietly and smoke
their pipes, and see the sport;" Red Jacket endeavored, but in
vain, to prevent his people from going. He said to them, "it's a
cheat; the design is to deceive you, and if you go you will find
that you have been deluded."
They threw back the taunt,--"You are a coward, you have
the mind of a woman, and are not fit to go to war."
Red Jacket though not at this time a chief, was a young
man of acknowledged talent and influence, and having a right to
express his opinion, did not hesitate to give it in favor of
peace. His opinion was well known among his people. Little Beard
has frequently been seen to bury his face in his blanket, and
give vent to his tears, in view of the havoc made among the
Senecas by the war, at the same time declaring,--"Red Jacket was
opposed to the war, HE WAS ALWAYS IN FAVOR OF PEACE, and how
much better it had been, had we listened to his advice30."
Red Jacket's prediction was too nearly verified. The
Seneca suffered most severely in that campaign. They fell under
the command of Thay-en-dan-e- gea or Brant, who went with a
company of Tories, led by Col. Butler, to intercept General
Herkimer, who was reported as coming to the relief of the
garrison. At a certain point on the way, where they expected the
general would pass, they formed an ambuscade, and though they
selected their ground with wisdom, and acquitted themselves with
great bravery, they were unable to stand before the invincible
courage of the heroes of Oriskany.
The Senecas claim to have lost in that engagement
thirty-three of their chiefs, and their feelings in view of it
are said to have been sad in the extreme31.
The charge of cowardice applied by the young warriors
to Red Jacket, upon their first starting out on this campaign,
was one frequently made during the war. His views were at
different times expressed in opposition to it, and his arguments
as often repelled by the young braves, who could not endure his
invectives. The reply was easily made, and hence in more
frequent demand, than if it had imposed a greater tax upon their
intellects. The epithet has often been applied to him since, and
though his tastes did not lead him to seek the fame of a
warrior, still it is believed he was not so devoid of courage,
as has sometimes been represented.
His views of the war, were not those of a partisan,
hence his conduct was often censured by those who had entered
heartily into the contest.
Brant has charged him with being the occasion of
trouble to him, in his efforts to arrest the march of Sullivan,
and his army, into the Indian country. Particularly at Newtown,
where considerable preparations had been made for defense. Says
Col. Stone,--"Sa-go-ye-wat-ha was then twenty-nine years old,
and though it does not appear that he had yet been created a
chief, he nevertheless seems to have been already a man of
influence. He was in the practice of holding private
consultations with the young warriors, and some of the younger
and less resolute chiefs, for the purpose of fomenting
discontents, and persuading them to sue for what Brant
considered, ignominious terms of peace.
"On one occasion as Brant has alleged, Red Jacket had
so far succeeded in his treachery, as to induce some of the
disaffected chiefs to send a runner into Sullivan's camp, to
make known dissensions he himself had awakened, and invite a
flag of truce, with propositions of peace to the Indians."
Though charged with acting criminally, it is here
expressly asserted, that it was to obtain peace. Peace he most
earnestly desired for his people, who were doomed to be wasted
in a contest not their own.
Nor, in view of his feelings respecting the war, is it
surprising he should have incurred the displeasure of
Cornplanter, while endeavoring to bring his countrymen to make a
stand against a portion of the invading army, on the beach of
Canandaigua lake, where was an Indian village of some size. Not
finding in Red Jacket an ardor for the undertaking which
corresponded in any degree with his own, he turned to the young
wife of the orator and exclaimed,--"Leave that man, he is a
coward; your children will disgrace you, they will all be
cowards32."
The epithet thus applied occasioned uneasiness to none
less than to the orator himself. Whenever he chose to notice it,
he would make a good return for what he had received.--In a war
of words, he was on his own chosen ground. He was a match for
their greatest champion, and in cross- firing, it could easily
be seen that his missiles were directed by one who was perfect
master of the art. He could handle at will the most cutting
sarcasm, and while maintaining a good natured, playful mood,
deal his blows with such power and effect, as to make the victim
of his irony resort to some other means of defense, than the
tongue. It is said that frequently by his cool, good natured
railery, he has caused the victim of his sport to turn upon and
strike him. He would answer it by a hearty laugh, unless the
blow was of such a nature as to demand of him a different
reception33. He seemed
to be armed at every point, as with a coat of mail, against the
arrows of his assailants. Their most powerful weapons would be
turned aside by his presence of mind, and matchless skill, and
leave him apparently unharmed.
A circumstance illustrating this point, once occurred
between him and Little Billy, a chief of some note among the
Seneca, who was frequently in the orator's company. This chief,
with Red Jacket and one or two others, were once passing from
their settlement on Canandaigua lake, to the old Seneca Castle,
near the foot of Seneca lake. On their way they encountered a
large grizzly bear. Little Billy and the others in the company,
were frightened and began to run. Red Jacket who was
distinguished as a hunter, and an excellent marksman, drew up
his rifle, and brought the monster to the ground.
It so happened, on one occasion sometime afterward,
that Little Billy was very pertinacious in calling Red Jacket a
coward. The orator did not appear to notice him at first; but
finding that he persisted in the charge, he turned to him and
coolly and sarcastically said, "Well, if I am coward I never run
unless it's for something bigger than a bear34."
It is hardly necessary to add, that nothing more was
heard from Little Billy concerning his cowardice on that day.
This charge of cowardice was owing in a great degree to
the orator's position. He was not on the popular side. The
majority of his people were against him. Had he acted in
accordance with their wishes, it is a question whether anything
would ever have been said about his deficiency in courage. And
this supposition is strengthened by the fact, that at a
subsequent period in his history, a little display of courage,
when acting in accordance with the wishes of his people, gained
for him a marked degree of approbation, and gave rise to the
affirmation, "the stain fixed upon his character, was thus wiped
away by his good conduct in the field35."
In opposing the wishes of his people, when bent on a
war of which he did not approve, he gained the epithet of
"coward". With less intelligence, and less moral courage, he
might have seconded the views of his nation, and been ranked a
brave.
Hence, though we do not claim for Red Jacket the
possession of qualities, adapted to make him conspicuous as a
military chieftain, we are disposed to attribute to him the
higher courage of acting in accordance with his own convictions
of propriety and duty. "He was born an orator, and while morally
brave, lacked the stolid insensibility to suffering and
slaughter, which characterized the war-captains of his nation36."
We readily concede that Red Jacket was fitted by nature
to excel in councils of peace, rather than in enterprises of
war; to gain victories in a conflict of mind with mind rather
than in physical strife, on the field of battle.
And it may be questioned whether the qualities adapted
to the highest achievements of oratory, would be congenial to
the rough encounters of war. Especially when the mind is already
preoccupied with inward thirstings after the glory of the
rostrum; it will not be apt to sigh for the camp, or the noise
and tinsel of mere military fame.
It is related of him that when a boy, he was present at
a great council held on the Shenandoah. Many nations were there
represented by their wise men and orators. The greatest among
them was Logan, who had removed from the territory of his tribe
to Shamokin. He was the son of Shikellemus, a celebrated chief
of the Cayuga nation, who, before the Revolution was a warm
friend of the whites.
On the occasion referred to, Red Jacket was so charmed
with Logan's style, and manner of delivery, that he resolved to
attain if possible the same high standard of eloquence; though
he almost despaired of equaling his distinguished model.
On his return to Cunadesaga, near the Seneca lake,
which was at that time his home, he sometimes incurred the
displeasure and reproof of his mother, by long absence from her
cabin, without any ostensible cause. When hard pressed for an
answer, he informed his mother, that "he had been playing
Logan."
"Thus in his mighty soul the fire of a generous
emulation had been kindled, not to go out until his oratorical
fame threw a refulgent glory on the declining fortunes of the
once formidable Iroquois. In the deep and silent forest he
practiced elocution, or to use his own expressive language,
played Logan, until he caught the manner and tone of his great
master. Unconsciously the forest orator, was an imitator of the
eloquent Greek, who tuned his voice on the wild sea beach, to
the thunders of the surge, and caught from nature's altar his
loftiest inspiration.
"Not without previous preparation, and the severest
discipline, did Red Jacket acquire his power of moving and
melting his hearers. His graceful attitudes, significant
gestures, perfect intonation, and impressive pauses, when the
lifted finger, and flashing eye told more than utterance, were
the result of sleepless toil; while his high acquirement was the
product of stern habitual thought, study of man, and keen
observation."
"He did not trust to the occasion alone for his finest
periods, and noblest metaphors. In the armory of his capacious
intellect the weapons of forensic warfare had been previously
polished and stored away. Ever ready for the unfaltering tongue
was the cutting rebuke, or apt illustration. By labor,
persevering labor, he achieved his renown. By exercising his
faculties in playing Logan when a boy, one of the highest
standards of mortal eloquence, either in ancient or modern
times, he has left a lesson to all ambitious aspirants, that
there is no royal road to greatness; that the desired goal is
only to be gained by scaling rugged cliffs, and treading painful
paths37."
The habit thus acquired in the orator's youth, became
characteristic of him, at a later period of his life. Previous
to his making any great forensic effort, he could be seen
walking in the woods alone, apparently in deep study38.

22. McKenney's Indian Biography Politely
favored by Alfred B. Street, Esq., and assistant Mr. J. H.
Hickox, of the State Library, Albany, N. Y.
23. This latter translation was given to the
author by the late Wm. Jones, a half-blood, son-in-law of Red
Jacket and a chief of some note. This interpretation was given
to some gentlemen from Buffalo who proposed to erect a monument
at Red Jacket's grave. It was given in a full council of the
chiefs of his tribe.
24. Conversation with Wm. Jones, Seneca chief.
25. Drake's Book of the Indians.
26. The expression of an English lady.--Turner.
27. Turner's Phelps and Gorham Purchase.
28. Life of Mary Jemison.
29. Testimony given to the author by Wm. Jones,
Seneca chief, and confirmed by Col. Wm. Jones, son of the Indian
interpreter, who affirms that prominent Indian chiefs had
declared in his hearing that these were the sentiments of Red
Jacket at this time.
30. Conversation of the author with Col. Jones.
31. "The mourning was excessive, and was
expressed by the most doleful yells, shrieks and howlings and by
inimitable gesticulations."--Mrs. Jemison's Narrative.
32. Col. Wm. Jones.
33. Wm. Jones, Seneca chief.
34. Conversation with Seneca chief, Wm. Jones.
35. McKenney's Indian Biography.
36. Bryant's address.
37. This statement, together with the remarks
that follow, is presented almost entire, from a reminiscence of
Red Jacket, given by Mr. Turner in his Pioneer History of the
Phelps and Gorham Purchase, a work that has rescued from
oblivion, many interesting and valuable historical
recollections.
38. Col. Wm. Jones.
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