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Red Jacket or SA-GO-YE-WAT-HA
Among the aborigines of this country,
few names have excited a deeper interest, or have been more
widely and familiarly known than that of Red Jacket. The
occasion of this notoriety was the rare fact that, though a rude
and unlettered son of the forest, he was distinguished for the
arts and accomplishments of the orator. His life marks an era in
the history of his nation and his name like that of Demosthenes,
is forever associated with eloquence.
Other circumstances however, impart interest to his
history. His was the last great name of a nation, and he is
entitled to remembrance, on the soil which was once the home of
his fathers. And though linked with a melancholy association, as
connected with the waning history of a people that once laid a
claim to greatness, but are now fast passing into obscurity, it
is not on this account the less attractive, but presents another
reason for our regard.
Such was the name of SA-GO-YE-WAT-HA, or, as he has
more commonly been called, Red Jacket. Having risen, by the
force of his eloquence, from an obscure station to the highest
rank among his people, he became conspicuous in all of those
great transactions, in which they gradually relinquished a title
to their old hunting grounds, and gave place to the intrusive
white man. And he lived to see his nation pass from the pride of
their ancient dominion, to so humble an inheritance, that his
last days were embittered with the thought, that the "red men"
were destined to become extinct. With him has ceased the glory
of their council fire, and of their name.
His origin, as we have intimated, was obscure. He must
be introduced, as he has come down to us, without rank or
pedigree. His pedigree nature acknowledged, and gave him a right
to become great among her sons. His birth is a matter of fact,
its time and place, circumstances of conjecture. Some affirm
that he was born at the Old Seneca Castle, near the foot of
Seneca lake, not far from 17501.
Another tradition awards the honor of his birth to a
place at, or near Canoga, on the banks of the Cayuga lake2.
Who were his parents? and what, his early history? As
the wave casts upon the shore some treasured fragment, and then
recedes to mingle with its parent waters, so their names, and
much of his early history have been lost in the oblivion of the
past.
So likewise it is uncertain, as to the time when the
wonderful powers of his genius began to be developed, or as to
the steps by which he arrived at the high distinction of orator
among his people.
Whether by dint of study he gained the requisite
discipline of mind, and acquired that elegance of diction for
which he was distinguished; whether by repeated trial and
failure, accompanied by a proud ambition, and an unyielding
purpose, he reached, like Demosthenes, the summit of his
aspirations; or, assisted more by nature than by art, emerged,
like Patrick Henry at once, into the grand arena of mind, and by
a single effort attained distinction and fame, is to be gathered
more from circumstances than from facts.
It is generally conceded, however, that the powers of
his intellect were of the highest order. Captain Horatio Jones,
the well known interpreter and agent among the Indians, and than
whom no one was more intimately acquainted with this orator of
the Seneca nation, was accustomed to speak of him as the
greatest man that ever lived. "For," said he, "the great men of
our own and of other times, have become so by education; but Red
Jacket was as nature made him. Had he enjoyed their advantages,
he would have surpassed them, since it can hardly be supposed
that they, without these, would have equalled him3."
Some allowance should be made for this statement,
perhaps, on the ground that Mr. Jones was a warm admirer of the
orator's genius; yet his admiration sprang from an intimate
knowledge of him, seen under circumstances, that afforded the
best opportunity of forming a just opinion of his talents; and
these, he maintained, "were among the noblest that nature ever
conferred upon man."
But genius, while it may have smoothed the way, may not
have spared him the pains, by which ordinary minds ascend to
greatness. For since it is so universally the fact, that the
path to eminence, is rugged and steep, and the gifts of fame
seldom bestowed but in answer to repeated toil; curiosity would
inquire by what means one, who was reputed a barbarian, gained
the highest distinction ever awarded to civilized man. It is not
enough to reply simply, "that nature made him so," or to
receive, without qualification, his own proud assertion, "I am
an orator, I was born an orator." The laws of mind are the same
for peasants, and princes in intellect; great minds as well as
small, must take measures to compass their object, or leave it
unattained.
It does not appear that his genius was sudden, or
precocious in its development. It is said that his mind,
naturally active and brilliant, gradually opened, until it
reached its meridian splendor. Nor did his powers grow without
any means to mature and perfect them. As the young oak is
strengthened by warring with the storm, so the faculties of his
mind gained force by entering freely into conflicts of opinion.
Accustomed to canvass in private the questions which agitated
the councils of his nation, he began to ascertain the reality of
his own power, and by measuring his own with other minds, he
gained the confidence that flows from superior wisdom4.
The tastes and regulations of his own people favored
very much, the promptings of his genius. They were lovers of
eloquence, and their form of government fostered its
cultivation. This though differing but little from the
simplicity found in rude states of society, presented a feature
peculiar among a people not far advanced in civilization, which
served greatly to promote elevation of mind, and advance them
far above a condition of barbarism. They were in the habit of
meeting in public assemblies, to discuss those questions that
pertained to the interests, or destiny of their nation. Around
their council fires their chiefs and warriors gathered, and
entered freely, so far as their dignity, consideration, or power
of debate admitted, into a deliberation on public affairs. And
here were manifested an ability and decorum which civilized
nations even, have viewed with admiration and surprise. For
though we might suppose their eloquence must have partaken of
rant and rhapsody, presenting a mass of incoherent ideas,
depending for their interest on the animation of gesture and
voice, with which they were uttered, yet we would do injustice
to their memory, if we did not give their orators the credit of
speaking as much to the purpose, and of exhibiting as great a
force of intellect, as many who would claim a higher place than
they in the scale of intelligence and refinement.
Many of their orators were distinguished for strength
of mind, and in native power of genius, might compare favorably,
with the men of any age or clime. The names of Garangula, Adario,
Hendrick, Skenandoah, Logan and others, might be mentioned with
pride by any people.
GARANGULA, has been styled the very Nestor of
his nation, whose powers of mind would not suffer in comparison
with a Roman, or more modern Senator5.
ADARIO is said to have been a man of "great
mind, the bravest of the brave," and possessing altogether the
best qualities of any Indian known to the French in Canada6.
It has been remarked of Hendrick, that for capacity, bravery,
vigor of mind, and immovable integrity united, he excelled all
the aboriginal inhabitants of the United States, of whom any
knowledge has come down to the present time7.
SKENANDOAH in his youth
was a brave and intrepid warrior, and in his riper years one of
the best of counsellors among the North American tribes. He
possessed a most vigorous mind, and was alike active, sagacious,
and persevering. He will long be remembered for a saying of his
to one who visited him toward the close of life; "I am," said
he, "an aged hemlock, the winds of an hundred winters have
whistled through my branches. I am dead at the top. The
generation to which I belonged has run away and left me." He was
a sincere believer in the Christian religion, and added to the
above "why I live the Great and Good Spirit only knows. Pray to
my Jesus, that I may have patience to wait for my appointed time
to die8."
And Mr. Jefferson regarded the appeal of LOGAN
to the white men, after the extirpation of his family, as
without a parallel in the history of eloquence.
These were men who have been revered by the civilized
world, as worthy of a place with the distinguished and great
among mankind.
"Oratory was not alone a natural gift, but an art among
the Iroquois. It enjoined painful study, unremitting practice,
and sedulous observation of the style, and methods of the best
masters. Red Jacket did not rely upon his native powers alone,
but cultivated the art with the same assiduity that
characterized the great Athenian orator. The
Iroquois, as their
earliest English historian observed, cultivated an Attic or
classic elegance of speech, which entranced every ear, among
their red auditory9."
Those public games, entertainments, religious ceremonies and
dances, common among the Indian tribes, added interest to their
council gatherings, and made them a scene of attraction for the
entire nation. Thither the young and old of both sexes were
accustomed to resort, and, assembled at their national forum,
listened with profound attention and silence to each word spoken
by their orators. "The unvarying courtesy, sobriety and dignity
of their convocations led one of their learned Jesuit historians
to liken them to the Roman Senate10."
"Their language was flexible and sonorous, the sense
largely depending upon inflection, copious in vowel sounds,
abounding in metaphor; affording constant opportunity for the
ingenious combination and construction of words to image
delicate, and varying shades of thought, and to express vehement
manifestations of passion; admitting of greater and more sudden
variations in pitch, than is permissible in English oratory, and
encouraging pantomimic gesture, for greater force and effect. In
other words it was not a cold, artificial, mechanical medium for
the expression of thought or emotion, or the concealment of
either, but was constructed, as we may fancy, much as was the
tuneful tongue spoken by our first parents, who stood in even
closer relations to nature11."
Hence, though the Iroquois were a warlike people, and delighted
in deeds of bravery, there was an inviting field opened to one,
who could chain their attention by his eloquence, and sway their
emotions at will.
Such advantages being presented for the exercise of the
powers of oratory, it can hardly be supposed that a mind endowed
as richly, as was Red Jacket's, by the gifts of nature, would
fail to perceive the path in which lay the true road to eminence
among his people. And his subsequent career indicates but too
clearly, the choice he made of the field in which to exercise
his noble powers.

1. Hist. of North American
tribes by Thos. L. McKenney.
2. Schoolcraft's Report.
3. Conversation of the author with Col. Wm.
Jones, of Geneseo, Livingston Co., N. Y., son of Capt. Horatio
Jones.
4. Conversation with Col. Wm. Jones.
5. Drake.
6. Charlevoix.
7. Dr. Dwight.
8. Annals of Tryon County.
9. Mr. Bryant's speech.
10. W. C. Bryant's speech before the Buffalo
Historical Society on the occasion of the re- interment of Red
Jacket's remains.
11. Ib.
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