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CHAPTER V.
Indian Warfare.
The Army at Fort Strother.--Crockett's Regiment.--Crockett at Home.--His
Reenlistment.--Jackson Surprised.--Military Ability of the Indians.--Humiliation
of the Creeks.--March to Florida.--Affairs at Pensacola.--Capture of the
City.--Characteristics of Crockett.--The Weary March,--Inglorious
Expedition.--Murder of Two Indians.--Adventures at the Island.--The Continued
March.--Severe Sufferings.--Charge upon the Uninhabited Village.
The army, upon its return to Fort Strother, found itself still in a starving
condition. Though the expedition had been eminently successful in the
destruction of Indian warriors, it had consumed their provisions, without
affording them any additional supply. The weather had become intensely cold. The
clothing of the soldiers, from hard usage, had become nearly worn out. The
horses were also emaciate and feeble. There was danger that many of the soldiers
must perish from destitution and hunger.
The regiment to which Crockett belonged had enlisted for sixty days. Their time
had long since expired. The officers proposed to Jackson that they and their
soldiers might be permitted to return to their homes, promising that they would
immediately re-enlist after having obtained fresh horses and fresh clothing.
Andrew Jackson was by nature one of the most unyielding of men. His will was
law, and must be obeyed, right or wrong. He was at that time one of the most
profane of men. He swore by all that was sacred that they should not go; that
the departure of so many of the men would endanger the possession of the fort
and the lives of the remaining soldiers. There were many of the soldiers in the
same condition, whose term of service had expired. They felt that they were free
and enlightened Americans, and resented the idea of being thus enslaved and
driven, like cattle, at the will of a single man. Mutinous feelings were
excited. The camp was filled with clamor. The soldiers generally were in
sympathy with those who demanded their discharge, having faithfully served out
the term of their enlistment. Others felt that their own turn might come when
they too might be thus enslaved.
There was a bridge which it was necessary for the soldiers to cross on the
homeward route. The inflexible General, supposing that the regulars would be
obedient to military discipline, and that it would be for their interest to
retain in the camp those whose departure would endanger all their lives placed
them upon the bridge, with cannon loaded to the muzzle with grape-shot. They
were ordered mercilessly to shoot down any who should attempt to cross without
his permission. In Crockett's ludicrous account of this adventure, he writes:
"The General refused to let us go. We were, however, determined to go. With
this, the General issued his orders against it. We began to fix for a start. The
General went and placed his cannon on a bridge we had to cross, and ordered out
his regulars and drafted men to prevent our crossing. But when the militia
started to guard the bridge, they would holler back to us to bring their
knapsacks along when we came; for they wanted to go as bad as we did. We got
ready, and moved on till we came near the bridge, where the General's men were
all strung along on both sides. But we all had our flints ready picked and our
guns ready primed, that, if we were fired on, we might fight our way through, or
all die together.
"When we came still nearer the bridge we heard the guards cocking their guns,
and we did the same. But we marched boldly on, and not a gun was fired, nor a
life lost. When we had passed, no further attempt was made to stop us. We went
on, and near Huntsville we met a reinforcement who were going on to join the
army. It consisted of a regiment of sixty-day volunteers. We got home pretty
safely, and in a short time we had procured fresh horses, and a supply of
clothing better suited for the season."
The officers and soldiers ere long rendezvoused again at Fort Deposit.
Personally interested as every one was in subduing the Creeks, whose hostility
menaced every hamlet with flames and the inmates of those hamlets with massacre,
still the officers were so annoyed by the arrogance of General Jackson that they
were exceedingly unwilling to serve again under his command.
Just as they came together, a message came from General Jackson, demanding that,
on their return, they should engage to serve for six months. He regarded
enlistment merely for sixty days as absurd. With such soldiers, he justly argued
that no comprehensive campaign could be entered upon. The officers held a
meeting to decide upon this question. In the morning, at drum-beat, they
informed the soldiers of the conclusion they had formed. Quite unanimously they
decided that they would not go back on a six-months term of service, but that
each soldier might do as he pleased. Crockett writes:
"I know'd if I went back home I wouldn't rest for I felt it my duty to be out.
And when out, I was somehow or other always delighted to be in the thickest of
the danger. A few of us, therefore, determined to push on and join the army. The
number I do not recollect, but it was very small."
When Crockett reached Fort Strother he was placed in a company of scouts under
Major Russel. Just before they reached the fort, General Jackson had set out on
an expedition in a southeasterly direction, to what was called Horseshoe Bend,
on the Tallapoosa River. The party of scouts soon overtook him and led the way.
As they approached the spot through the silent trails which threaded the wide
solitudes, they came upon many signs of Indians being around. The scouts gave
the alarm, and the main body of the army came up. The troops under Jackson
amounted to about one thousand men. It was the evening of January 23d, 1814.
The camp-fires were built, supper prepared, and sentinels being carefully
stationed all around to prevent surprise, the soldiers, protected from the
wintry wind only by the gigantic forest, wrapped themselves in their blankets
and threw themselves down on the withered leaves for sleep. The Indians crept
noiselessly along from tree to tree, each man searching for a sentinel, until
about too hours before day, when they opened a well-aimed fire from the
impenetrable darkness in which they stood. The sentinels retreated back to the
encampment, and the whole army was roused.
The troops were encamped in the form of a hollow square, and thus were
necessarily between the Indians and the light of their own camp-fires. Not a
warrior was to be seen. The only guide the Americans had in shooting, was to
notice the flash of the enemy's guns. They fired at the flash. But as every
Indian stood behind a tree, it is not probable that many, if any, were harmed.
The Indians were very wary not to expose themselves. They kept at a great
distance, and were not very successful in their fire. Though they wounded quite
a number, only four men were killed. With the dawn of the morning they all
vanished.
General Jackson did not wish to leave the corpses of the slain to be dug up and
scalped by the savages. He therefore erected a large funeral pyre, placed the
bodies upon it, and they were soon consumed to ashes. Some litters were made of
long and flexible poles, attached to two horses, one at each end, and upon these
the wounded were conveyed over the rough and narrow way. The Indians, thus far,
had manifestly been the victors They had inflicted serious injury upon the
Americans; and there is no evidence that a single one of their warriors had
received the slightest harm. This was the great object of Indian strategy. In
the wars of civilization, a great general has ever been willing to sacrifice the
lives of ten thousand of his own troops if, by so doing, he could kill twenty
thousand of the enemy. But it was never so with the Indians. They prized the
lives of their warriors too highly.
On their march the troops came to a wide creek, which it was necessary to cross.
Here the Indians again prepared for battle. They concealed themselves so
effectually as to elude all the vigilance of the scouts. When about half the
troops had crossed the stream, the almost invisible Indians commenced their
assault, opening a very rapid but scattering fire. Occasionally a warrior was
seen darting from one point to another, to obtain better vantage-ground.
Major Russel was in command of a small rear-guard. His soldiers soon appeared
running almost breathless to join the main body, pursued by a large number of
Indians. The savages had chosen the very best moment for their attack. The
artillery-men were in an open field surrounded by the forest. The Indians, from
behind stumps, logs, and trees, took deliberate aim, and almost every bullet
laid a soldier prostrate. Quite a panic ensued. Two of the colonels, abandoning
their regiments, rushed across the creek to escape the deadly fire. There is no
evidence that the Indians were superior in numbers to the Americans. But it
cannot be denied that the Americans, though under the leadership of Andrew
Jackson, were again outgeneralled. General Jackson lost, in this short conflict,
in killed and wounded, nearly one hundred men. His disorganized troops at length
effected the passage of the creek, beyond which the Indians did not pursue them.
Crockett writes:
"I will not say exactly that the old General was whipped. But I think he would
say himself that he was nearer whipped this time than any other; for I know that
all the world couldn't make him acknowledge that he was pointedly whipped. I
know I was mighty glad when it was over, and the savages quit us, for I began to
think there was one behind every tree in the woods."
Crockett, having served out his term, returned home. But he was restless there.
Having once experienced the excitements of the camp, his wild, untrained nature
could not repose in the quietude of domestic life. The conflict between the
United States and a small band of Indians was very unequal. The loss of a single
warrior was to the Creeks irreparable. General Jackson was not a man to yield to
difficulties. On the 27th of March, 1814, he drove twelve hundred Creek warriors
into their fort at Tohopeka. They were then surrounded, so that escape was
impossible, and the fort was set on fire. The carnage was awful. Almost every
warrior perished by the bullet or in the flames. The military power of the tribe
was at an end. The remnant, utterly dispirited, sued for peace.
Quite a number of the Creek warriors fled to Florida, and joined the hostile
Indian tribes there. We were at this time involved in our second war with Great
Britain. The Government of our mother country was doing everything in its power
to rouse the savages against us. The armies in Canada rallied most of the
Northern tribes beneath their banners. Florida, at that time, belonged to Spain.
The Spanish Government was nominally neutral in the conflict between England and
the United States. But the Spanish governor in Florida was in cordial sympathy
with the British officers. He lent them all the aid and comfort in his power,
carefully avoiding any positive violation of the laws of neutrality. He extended
very liberal hospitality to the refugee Creek warriors, and in many ways
facilitated their cooperation with the English.
A small British fleet entered the mouth of the Apalachicola River and landed
three hundred soldiers. Here they engaged vigorously in constructing a fort, and
in summoning all the surrounding Indian tribes to join them in the invasion of
the Southern States. General Jackson, with a force of between one and two
thousand men, was in Northern Alabama, but a few days' march north of the
Florida line. He wrote to the Secretary of War, in substance, as follows:
"The hostile Creeks have taken refuge in Florida. They are there fed, clothed,
and protected. The British have armed a large force with munitions of war, and
are fortifying and stirring up the savages. If you will permit me to raise a few
hundred militia, which can easily be done, I will unite them with such a force
of regulars as can easily be collected, and will make a descent on Pensacola,
and will reduce it. I promise you I will bring the war in the South to a speedy
termination; and English influence with the savages, in this quarter, shall be
forever destroyed."
The President was not prepared thus to provoke war with Spain, by the invasion
of Florida. Andrew Jackson assumed the responsibility. The British had recently
made an attack upon Mobile, and being repulsed, had retired with their squadron
to the harbor of Pensacola. Jackson called for volunteers to march upon
Pensacola. Crockett roused himself at the summons, like the war-horse who snuffs
the battle from afar. "I wanted," he wrote, "a small taste of British fighting,
and I supposed they would be there."
His wife again entered her tearful remonstrance. She pointed to her little
children, in their lonely hut far away in the wilderness, remote from all
neighborhood, and entreated the husband and the father not again to abandon
them. Rather unfeelingly he writes, "The entreaties of my wife were thrown in
the way of my going, but all in vain; for I always had a way of just going ahead
at whatever I had a mind to."
Many who have perused this sketch thus far, may inquire, with some surprise,
"What is it which has given this man such fame as is even national? He certainly
does not develop a very attractive character; and there is but little of the
romance of chivalry thrown around his exploits. The secret is probably to be
found in the following considerations, the truth of which the continuation of
this narrative will be continually unfolding."
Without education, without refinement, without wealth or social position, or any
special claims to personal beauty, he was entirely self-possessed and at home
under all circumstances. He never manifested the slightest embarrassment. The
idea seemed never to have entered his mind that there could be any person
superior to David Crockett, or any one so humble that Crockett was entitled to
look down upon him with condescension. He was a genuine democrat. All were in
his view equal. And this was not the result of thought, of any political or
moral principle. It was a part of his nature, which belonged to him without any
volition, like his stature or complexion. This is one of the rarest qualities to
be found in any man. We do not here condemn it, or applaud it. We simply state
the fact.
In the army he acquired boundless popularity from his fun-making qualities. In
these days he was always merry. Bursts of laughter generally greeted Crockett's
approach and followed his departure. He was blessed with a memory which seemed
absolutely never to have forgotten anything. His mind was an inexhaustable
store-house of anecdote. These he had ever at command. Though they were not
always, indeed were seldom, of the most refined nature, they were none the less
adapted to raise shouts of merriment in cabin and camp. What Sydney Smith was at
the banqueting board in the palatial saloon, such was David Crockett at the
campfire and in the log hut. If ever in want of an illustrative anecdote he
found no difficulty in manufacturing one.
His thoughtless kindness of heart and good nature were inexhaustible. Those in
want never appealed to him in vain. He would even go hungry himself that he
might feed others who were more hungry. He would, without a moment's
consideration, spend his last dollar to buy a blanket for a shivering soldier,
and, without taking any merit for the deed, would never think of it again. He
did it without reflection, as he breathed.
Such was the David Crockett who, from the mere love of adventure, left wife and
children, in the awful solitude of the wilderness, to follow General Jackson in
a march to Pensacola. He seems fully to have understood the character of the
General, his merits and his defects. The main body of the army, consisting of a
little more than two thousand men, had already commenced its march, when
Crockett repaired to a rendezvous, in the northern frontiers of Alabama, where
another company was being formed, under Major Russel, soon to follow. The
company numbered one hundred and thirty men, and commenced its march.
They forded the Tennessee River at Muscle Shoals, and marched south unmolested,
through the heart of the Choctaw and Chickasaw nations, and pressed rapidly
forward two or three hundred miles, until they reached the junction of the
Tombeckbee and Alabama rivers, in the southern section of the State. The main
army was now but two days' march before them. The troops, thus far, had been
mounted, finding sufficient grazing for their horses by the way. But learning
that there was no forage to be found between there and Pensacola, they left
their animals behind them, under a sufficient guard, at a place called Cut-off,
and set out for the rest of the march, a distance of about eighty miles, on
foot. The slight protective works they threw up here, they called Fort Stoddart.
These light troops, hardy men of iron nerves, accomplished the distance in about
two days. On the evening of the second day, they reached an eminence but a short
distance out from Pensacola, where they found the army encamped. Not a little to
Crockett's disappointment, he learned that Pensacola was already captured. Thus
he lost his chance of having "a small taste of British fighting."
The British and Spaniards had obtained intelligence of Jackson's approach, and
had made every preparation to drive him back. The forts were strongly
garrisoned, and all the principal streets of the little Spanish city were
barricaded. Several British war-vessels were anchored in the bay, and so placed
as to command with their guns the principal entrance to the town. Jackson, who
had invaded the Spanish province unsanctioned by the Government, was anxious to
impress upon the Spanish authorities that the measure had been reluctantly
adopted, on his own authority, as a military necessity; that he had no
disposition to violate their neutral rights; but that it was indispensable that
the British should be dislodged and driven away.
The pride of the Spaniard was roused, and there was no friendly response to this
appeal. But the Spanish garrison was small, and, united with the English fleet,
could present no effectual opposition to the three thousand men under such a
lion-hearted leader as General Jackson. On the 7th of January the General opened
fire upon the foe. The conflict was short. The Spaniards were compelled to
surrender their works. The British fled to the ships. The guns were turned upon
them. They spread sail and disappeared. Jackson was severely censured, at the
time, for invading the territory of a neutral power. The final verdict of his
countrymen has been decidedly in his favor.
It was supposed that the British would move for the attack of Mobile. This place
then consisted of a settlement of but about one hundred and fifty houses.
General Jackson, with about two thousand men, marched rapidly for its defence. A
few small, broken bands of hostile, yet despairing Creeks, fled back from
Florida into the wilds of Alabama. A detachment of nearly a thousand men, under
Major Russell, were sent in pursuit of these fleas among the mountains. Crockett
made part of this expedition. The pursuing soldiers directed their steps
northwest about a hundred miles to Fort Montgomery, on the Alabama, just above
its confluence with the Tornbeckbee, about twelve miles above Fort Stoddart. Not
far from there was Fort Mimms, where the awful massacre had taken place which
opened the Creek war.
There were many cattle grazing in the vicinity of the fort at the time of the
massacre, which belonged to the garrison. These animals were now running wild. A
thousand hungry men gave them chase. The fatal bullet soon laid them all low,
and there was great feasting and hilarity in the camp. The carouse was much
promoted by the arrival that evening of a large barge, which had sailed up the
Alabama River from Mobile, with sugar, coffee, and,--best of all, as the
soldiers said--worst of all, as humanity cries,--with a large amount of
intoxicating liquors.
The scene presented that night was wild and picturesque in the extreme. The
horses of the army were scattered about over the plain grazing upon the rich
herbage. There was wood in abundance near, and the camp-fires for a thousand men
threw up their forked flames, illumining the whole region with almost the light
of day. The white tents of the officers, the varied groups of the soldiers,
running here and there, in all possible attitudes, the cooking and feasting,
often whole quarters of beef roasting on enormous spits before the vast fires,
afforded a spectacle such as is rarely seen.
One picture instantly arrested the eye of every beholder. There were one hundred
and eighty-six friendly Chickasaw and Choctaw Indians, who had enlisted in the
army. They formed a band by themselves under their own chiefs. They were all
nearly naked, gorgeously painted, and decorated with the very brilliant attire
of the warrior, with crimson-colored plumes, and moccasins and leggins richly
fringed, and dyed in bright and strongly contrasting hues. These savages were in
the enjoyment of their greatest delight, drinking to frenzy, and performing
their most convulsive dances, around the flaming fires.
In addition to this spectacle which met the eye, there were sounds of revelry
which fell almost appallingly upon the ear. The wide expanse reverberated with
bacchanal songs, and drunken shouts, and frenzied war-whoops. These were all
blended in an inextricable clamor. With the unrefined eminently, and in a
considerable degree with the most refined, noise is one of the essential
elements of festivity. A thousand men were making all the noise they could in
this midnight revel. Probably never before, since the dawn of creation, had the
banks of the Alabama echoed with such a clamor as in this great carouse, which
had so suddenly burst forth from the silence of the almost uninhabited
wilderness.
This is the poetry of war. This it is which lures so many from the tameness of
ordinary life to the ranks of the army. In such scenes, Crockett, bursting with
fun, the incarnation of wit and good nature, was in his element. Here he was
chief. All did him homage. His pride was gratified by his distinction. Life in
his lonely hut, with wife and children, seemed, in comparison, too spiritless to
be endured.
The Alabama here runs nearly west. The army was on the south side of the river.
The next day the Indians asked permission to cross to the northern bank on an
exploring expedition. Consent was given; but Major Russel decided to go with
them, taking a company of sixteen men, of whom Crockett was one. They crossed
the river and encamped upon the other side, seeing no foe and encountering no
alarm. They soon came to a spot where the winding river, overflowing its banks,
spread over a wide extent of the flat country. It was about a mile and a half
across this inundated meadow. To journey around it would require a march of many
miles. They waded the meadow. The water was very cold, often up to their
armpits, and they stumbled over the rough ground. This was not the poetry of
war. But still there is a certain degree of civilization in which the monotony
of life is relieved by such adventures.
When they reached the other side they built large fires, and warmed and dried
themselves. They were in search of a few fugitive Indian warriors, who, fleeing
from Pensacola, had scattered themselves over a wilderness many hundred square
miles in extent. This pursuit of them, by a thousand soldiers, seems now very
foolish. But it is hardly safe for us, seated by our quiet firesides, and with
but a limited knowledge of the circumstances, to pass judgment upon the measure.
The exploring party consisted, as we have mentioned, of nearly two hundred
Indians, and sixteen white men. They advanced very cautiously. Two scouts were
kept some distance in the advance, two on the side nearest the river, and five
on their right. In this way they had moved along about six miles, when the two
spies in front came rushing breathlessly back, with the tidings that they had
discovered a camp of Creek Indians. They halted for a few moments while all
examined their guns and their priming and prepared for battle.
The Indians went through certain religious ceremonies, and getting out their
war-paint, colored their bodies anew. They then came to Major Russell, and told
him that, as he was to lead them in the battle, he must be painted too. He
humored them, and was painted in the most approved style of an Indian warrior.
The plan of battle was arranged to strike the Indian camp by surprise, when they
were utterly unprepared for any resistance. The white men were cautiously to
proceed in the advance, and pour in a deadly fire to kill as many as possible.
The Indians were then, taking advantage of the panic, to rush in with tomahawk
and scalping-knife, and finish the scene according to their style of battle,
which spared neither women nor children. It is not pleasant to record such a
measure. They crept along, concealed by the forest, and guided by the sound of
pounding, till they caught sight of the camp. A little to their chagrin they
found that it consisted of two peaceful wigwams, where there was a man, a woman,
and several children. The wigwams were also on an island of the river, which
could not be approached without boats. There could not be much glory won by an
army of two hundred men routing such a party and destroying their home. There
was also nothing to indicate that these Indians had even any unfriendly
feelings. The man and woman were employed in bruising what was called brier
root, which they had dug from the forest, for food. It seems that this was the
principal subsistence used by the Indians in that vicinity.
While the soldiers were deliberating what next to do, they heard a gun fired in
the direction of the scouts, at some distance on the right, followed by a single
shrill war-whoop. This satisfied them that if the scouts had met with a foe, it
was indeed war on a small scale. There seemed no need for any special caution.
They all broke and ran toward the spot from which the sounds came. They soon met
two of the spies, who told the following not very creditable story, but one
highly characteristic of the times.
As they were creeping along through the forest, they found two Indians, who they
said were Creeks, out hunting. As they were approaching each other, it so
happened that there was a dense cluster of bushes between them, so that they
were within a few feet of meeting before either party was discovered. The two
spies were Choctaws. They advanced directly to the Indians, and addressed them
in the most friendly manner; stating that they had belonged to General Jackson's
army, but had escaped, and were on their way home. They shook hands, kindled a
fire, and sat down and smoked in apparent perfect cordiality.
One of the Creeks had a gun. The other had only a bow and arrows. After this
friendly interview, they rose and took leave of each other, each going in
opposite directions. As soon as their backs were turned, and they were but a few
feet from each other, one of the Choctaws turned around and shot the
unsuspecting Creek who had the gun. He fell dead, without a groan. The other
Creek attempted to escape, while the other Choctaw snapped his gun at him
repeatedly, but it missed fire. They then pursued him, overtook him, knocked him
down with the butt of their guns, and battered his head until he also was
motionless in death. One of the Choctaws, in his frenzied blows, broke the stock
of his rifle. They then fired off the gun of the Creek who was killed, and one
of them uttered the war-whoop which was heard by the rest of the party.
These two savages drew their scalping-knives and cut off the heads of both their
victims. As the whole body came rushing up, they found the gory corpses of the
slain, with their dissevered heads near by. Each Indian had a war-club. With
these massive weapons each savage, in his turn, gave the mutilated heads a
severe blow. When they had all performed this barbaric deed, Crockett, whose
peculiar type of good nature led him not only to desire to please the savages,
but also to know what would please them, seized a war-club, and, in his turn,
smote with all his strength the mangled, blood-stained heads. The Indians were
quite delighted. They gathered around him with very expressive grunts of
satisfaction, and patting him upon the back, exclaimed, "Good warrior! Good
warrior!"
The Indians then scalped the heads, and, leaving the bodies unburied, the whole
party entered a trail which led to the river, near the point where the two
wigwams were standing. As they followed the narrow path they came upon the
vestiges of a cruel and bloody tragedy. The mouldering corpses of a Spaniard,
his wife, and four children lay scattered around, all scalped. Our hero
Crockett, who had so valiantly smitten the dissevered heads of the two Creeks
who had been so treacherously murdered, confesses that the revolting spectacle
of the whites, scalped and half devoured, caused him to shudder. He writes:
"I began to feel mighty ticklish along about this time; for I knowed if there
was no danger then, there had been, and I felt exactly like there still was."
The white soldiers, leading the Indians, continued their course until they
reached the river. Following it down, they came opposite the point where the
wigwams stood upon the island. The two Indian hunters who had been killed had
gone out from this peaceful little encampment. Several Indian children were
playing around, and the man and woman whom they had before seen were still
beating their roots. Another Indian woman was also there seen. These peaceful
families had no conception of the disaster which had befallen their companions
who were hunting in the woods. Even if they had heard the report of the rifles,
they could only have supposed that it was from the guns of the hunters firing at
game.
The evening twilight was fading away. The whole party was concealed in a dense
canebrake which fringed the stream. Two of the Indians were sent forward as a
decoy--a shameful decoy--to lure into the hands of two hundred warriors an
unarmed man, two women, and eight or ten children. The Indians picked out some
of their best marksmen and hid them behind trees and logs near the river. They
were to shoot down the Indians whom others should lure to cross the stream.
The creek which separated the island from the mainland was deep, but not so wide
but that persons without much difficulty could make themselves heard across it.
Two of the Indians went down to the river-side, and hailed those at the wigwams,
asking them to send a canoe across to take them over. An Indian woman came down
to the bank and informed them that the canoe was on their side, that two hunters
had crossed the creek that morning, and had not yet returned. These were the two
men who had been so inhumanly murdered. Immediate search was made for the canoe,
and it was found a little above the spot where the men were hiding. It was a
very large buoyant birch canoe, constructed for the transportation of a numerous
household, with all their goods, and such game as they might take.
This they loaded with warriors to the water's edge, and they began vigorously to
paddle over to the island. When the one solitary Indian man there saw this
formidable array approaching he fled into the woods. The warriors landed, and
captured the two women and the little children, ten in number, and conveyed
their prisoners, with the plunder of the wigwams, back across the creek to their
own encampment. This was not a very brilliant achievement to be accomplished by
an army of two hundred warriors aided by a detachment of sixteen white men under
Major Russel. What finally became of these captives we know not. It is
gratifying to be informed by David Crockett that they did not kill either the
squaws or the pappooses.
The company then marched through the silent wilderness, a distance of about
thirty miles east, to the Conecuh River. This stream, in its picturesque
windings through a region where even the Indian seldom roved, flowed into the
Scambia, the principal river which pours its floods, swollen by many
tributaries, into Pensacola Bay. It was several miles above the point where the
detachment struck the river that the Indian encampment, to which the two
murdered men had alluded, was located. But the provisions of the party were
exhausted. There was scarcely any game to be found. Major Russel did not deem it
prudent to march to the attack of the encampment, until he had obtained a fresh
supply of provisions. The main body of the army, which had remained in Florida,
moving slowly about, without any very definite object, waiting for something to
turn up was then upon the banks of the Scambia. Colonel Blue was in command.
David Crockett was ordered to take a light birch canoe, and two men, one a
friendly Creek Indian, and paddle down the stream about twenty miles to the main
camp. Here he was to inform Colonel Blue of Major Russel's intention to ascend
the Conecuh to attack the Creeks, and to request the Colonel immediately to
dispatch some boats up the river with the needful supplies.
It was a romantic adventure descending in the darkness that wild and lonely
stream, winding through the dense forest of wonderful exuberance of vegetation.
In the early evening he set out. The night proved very dark. The river, swollen
by recent rains, overflowed its banks and spread far and wide over the low
bottoms. The river was extremely crooked, and it was with great difficulty that
they could keep the channel. But the instinct of the Indian guide led them
safely along, through overhanging boughs and forest glooms, until, a little
before midnight, they reached the camp. There was no time to be lost. Major
Russel was anxious to have the supplies that very night dispatched to him, lest
the Indians should hear of their danger and should escape.
But Colonel Blue did not approve of the expedition. There was no evidence that
the Indian encampment consisted of anything more than half a dozen wigwams,
where a few inoffensive savages, with their wives and children, were eking out a
half-starved existence by hunting, fishing, and digging up roots from the
forest. It did not seem wise to send an army of two hundred and sixteen men to
carry desolation and woe to such humble homes. Crockett was ordered to return
with this message to the Major. Military discipline, then and there, was not
very rigid. He hired another man to carry back the unwelcome answer in his
place. In the light canoe the three men rapidly ascended the sluggish stream.
Just as the sun was rising over the forest, they reached the camp of Major
Russell. The detachment then immediately commenced its march down the River
Scambia, and joined the main body at a point called Miller's Landing. Here
learning that some fugitive Indians were on the eastern side of the stream, a
mounted party was sent across, swimming their horses, and several Indians were
hunted down and shot.
Soon after this, the whole party, numbering nearly twelve hundred in all,
commenced a toilsome march of about two or three hundred miles across the State
to the Chattahoochee River, which constitutes the boundary-line between Southern
Alabama and Georgia. Their route led through pathless wilds. No provisions, of
any importance, could be found by the way. They therefore took with them rations
for twenty-eight days. But their progress was far more slow and toilsome than
they had anticipated. Dense forests were to be threaded, where it was necessary
for them to cut their way through almost tropical entanglement of vegetation.
Deep and broad marshes were to be waded, where the horses sank almost to their
saddle-girths. There were rivers to be crossed, which could only be forded by
ascending the banks through weary leagues of wilderness.
Thus, when twenty-eight days had passed, and their provisions were nearly
expended, though they had for some time been put on short allowance, they found
that they had accomplished but three-quarters of their journey. Actual
starvation threatened them. But twice in nineteen days did Crockett Taste of any
bread. Despondency spread its gloom over the half-famished army. Still they
toiled along, almost hopeless, with tottering footsteps. War may have its
excitements and its charms. But such a march as this, of woe-begone, emaciate,
skeleton bands, is not to be counted as among war's pomps and glories.
One evening, in the deepening twilight, when they had been out thirty-four days,
the Indian scouts, ever sent in advance, came into camp with the announcement,
that at the distance of but a few hours' march before them, the Chattahoochee
River was to be found, with a large Indian village upon its banks. We know not
what reason there was to suppose that the Indians inhabiting this remote village
were hostile. But as the American officers decided immediately upon attacking
them, we ought to suppose that they, on the ground, had sufficient reason to
justify this course.
The army was immediately put in motion. The rifles were loaded and primed, and
the flints carefully examined, that they might not fall into ambush unprepared.
The sun was just rising as they cautiously approached the doomed village. There
was a smooth green meadow a few rods in width on the western bank of the river,
skirted by the boundless forest. The Indian wigwams and lodges, of varied
structure, were clustered together on this treeless, grassy plain, in much
picturesque beauty. The Indians had apparently not been apprised of the approach
of the terrible tempest of war about to descend upon them. Apparently, at that
early hour, they were soundly asleep. Not a man, woman, or child was to be seen.
Silently, screened by thick woods, the army formed in line of battle. The two
hundred Indian warriors, rifle in hand and tomahawk at belt, stealthily took
their position. The white men took theirs. At a given signal, the war-whoop
burst from the lips of the savages, and the wild halloo of the backwoodsmen
reverberated through the forest, as both parties rushed forward in the impetuous
charge. "We were all so furious," writes Crockett, "that even the certainty of a
pretty hard fight could not have restrained us."
But to the intense mortification of these valiant men, not a single living being
was to be found as food for bullet or tomahawk. The huts were all deserted, and
despoiled of every article of any value. There was not a skin, or an unpicked
bone, or a kernel of corn left behind. The Indians had watched the march of the
foe, and, with their wives and little ones. had retired to regions where the
famishing army could not follow them.
Chapter 6
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