WHITE COUNTY, INDIANA
The Historical Background
As We Approach The Pages
Of History, Another Background Is To Be Painted In Which, Although It
Is Not Concerned With Speculation Entirely, Has Little Practical
Bearing On The Founding And Growth Of White County. But It Will Enable
The Reader To Get A Perspective—which Is Always Of Advantage—and To
Obtain A Clear Idea Of The Relations Of His Home Country To The Various
Governments Which Claimed Sovereignty Over The Territory Which Is Now
The Soil Of The United States, Indiana And White County. Such
Information Has Therefore A Certain Domestic Value, Aside From Being
The Means Of Conveying To The Reader A Definite Idea Of Who Were The
Original Masters Of The Soil Before The Indians Relinquished It To The
Whites, And The Historical Processes By Which The Way Was Cleared For
The Establishment Of The Civil Security Of The Present.
Cartographic
Evidences
At The Very Outset Of The
Incursion Of The First Frenchmen To The Indian Country Of What Is Now
Indiana, There Is Uncertainty As To The Date Of Their Coming. At The
Best It Can Only Be Said That La Salle And His Men Were Engaged In
Their Explorations And Discoveries Down And Up The Mississippi And Ohio
Rivers, And Their Tributaries, For About Twenty Years Previous To The
Assassination Of The Great Leader In 1687, And That The Most Positive
Evidence As To Their Actual Journeyings In Northwestern Indiana Is
Found In The Maps Which Were Issued By The Government During That
Period. Joliet's Large Map Of 1674 Delineates La Salle's Route Along
The Main Valley Of The Ohio, But Indicates No French Settlements In
What Is Now Indiana. An Earlier And A Smaller Map Shows The Course Of
The Ohio As The Result Of La Salle's Explorations Which Commenced In
1669. Still Following The Cartographical Evidence, It Is Probable That
None Of La Salle's Parties Explored The Branches Of The Ohio In The
Present State Of Indiana Until During The Later Period Of His Career.
First
Record Of The Tippecanoe
Franquelin's Map Of 1684
And D'anville's Map Of "La Salle's Explorations From 1679 To 1683," Are
The First To Give The Courses Of The Wabash, The Tippecanoe, The Eel,
And Lesser Tributaries Of The Ohio System. But All Indication Of French
Settlements Is Absent From Even These Later Maps, Although La Salle's
Explorations And The Cartographic Records Of Them Issued By The French
Government Constituted The Basis Of Its Territorial Claims In North
America. But For Twenty-Five Years After La Salle's Death, Before The
Miami Confederation Of Indians, Who Had Abandoned Their Homes At The
Instigation Of La Salle And Joined The Western Alliance Against Their
Iroquois Enemies, Returned To Indiana Soil Under The Protectorate Of
New France. Until The Early Part Of The Eighteenth Century The Ohio
Country Claimed By France Was Not Safe From The Incursions Of The Five
Nations, Consequently No French Settlements Showed On The Maps Of That
Period—as There Were None.
Versailles,
The Colonial Seat Of Government
Prom La Salle's Time
Until The Treaty Of Paris Placed New France Formally In The Hands Of
Great Britain, What Is Now Indiana Was Governed From Versailles, Old
France, Which Was The Seat Of The Colonial Office, Orders From Which
Were Dispatched To The Governor General In The New World.
Indiana
As A Part Of New France
A Panoramic View Of The
French Control Of Indiana Is Well Presented By Dr. William S. Haymond,
For Twenty Years One Of The Most Scholarly And Prominent Citizens Of
Monticello And Afterward An Honored Resident Of Indianapolis And A
National Figure In Congress. As Shown In His "History Of Indiana,"
Published Six Years Before His Death, It Is Unfolded In This Wise: "In
1670, And For Many Years Previous, The Fertile Region Of Country Now
Included Within The Boundaries Of The State Of Indiana, Was Inhabited
By The Miami Confederation Of Indians. This League Consisted Of Several
Algonquin Tribes, Notably The Twightwees, Weas, Piankeshaws And
Shockeys, And Was Formed At An Early Period—probably In The Early Part
Of The Seventeenth Century—for The Purpose Of Repelling The Invasions
Of The Iroquois, Or Five Nations, At Whose Hands They Had Suffered Many
Severe Defeats. By The Frequent And Unsuccessful Wars In Which They
Were Compelled To Engage In Self-Defense Their Numbers Had Been Greatly
Reduced Until, At The Date Mentioned, They Could Not Muster More Than
Fifteen Hundred Or Two Thousand Warriors. They Dwelt In Small Villages
On The Banks Of The Various Rivers In Indiana And Extended Their
Dominion As Far East As The Scioto, North To The Great Lakes And West
To The Country Of The Illinois. Their Principal Settlements Were
Scattered Along The Headwaters Of The Great Miami, The Banks Of The
Maumee, The St. Joseph Of Lake Michigan, The Wabash And Its
Tributaries. Although Once Important Among The Nations Of The Lake
Region They Had Become Greatly Demoralized By Repeated Defeats In War,
And When First Visited By The French Their Villages Presented A Very
Untidy Appearance. They Were Living In Constant Terror Of The Five
Nations, Practicing Only Sufficient Industry To Prevent Starvation And
Indulging All Their Vicious Passions To A Vulgar Extreme.
Great
Chain Of French Forts
"Almost Immediately
Following The Discovery And Exploration Of The Mississippi By La Salle
In 1682, And A Few Years Later By James Marquette, The Government Of
France Began To Encourage The Policy Of Connecting Its Possessions In
North America By A Chain Of Fortifications And Trading Posts And
Missionary Stations, Extending From New Orleans On The Southwest To
Quebec On The Northeast. This Undertaking Was Inaugurated By Lamotte
Cadillac, Who Established Fort Pontchartrain On The Detroit River In
1701.
French-Indian
Amalgamation
"At This Period The
Zealous Jesuit Missionaries, The Adventurous French Fur Traders, With
Their Coarse Blue And Red Cloths, Fine Scarlet, Guns, Powder, Balls,
Knives, Ribbons, Beads, Vermilion, Tobacco And Rum; The Careless
Rangers, Or Coureurs Des Bois, Whose Chief Vocation Was Conducting The
Canoes Of The Traders Among The Lakes And Rivers, Made Their Appearance
Among The Indians Of Indiana. The Pious Jesuits Held Up The Cross Of
Christ And Unfolded The Mysteries Of The Catholic Religion In Broken
Indian To Those Astonished Savages, While The Speculating Trader
Offered Them Fire Water And Other Articles Of Merchandise In Exchange
For Their Peltries, And The Rangers, Shaking Loose Every Tie Of Blood
And Kindred, Identified Themselves With The Savages And Sank Into Utter
Barbarism."
The Jesuit Missionaries
Were Always Cordially Received By The Miami Tribes. These Indians Would
Listen Patiently To The Strange Theory Of The Savior And Salvation,
Manifest A Willing Belief In All They Beard, And Then, As If To
Entertain Their Visitors In Return, Would Tell Them The Story Of Their
Own Simple Faith In The Manitous, And Stalk Off With A Groan Of
Dissatisfaction Because The Missionaries Would Not Accept Their Theory
With Equal Courtesy. Missionary Stations Were Established At An Early
Day In All Of The Principal Villages And The Work Of Instructing And
Converting The Savages Was Begun In Earnest. The Order Of Religious
Exercises Established At The Missions Among The Miamis Was Nearly The
Same As That Among The Other Indians. Early In The Morning The
Missionaries Would Assemble The Indians At The Church, Or The Hut Used
For That Purpose, And After Prayers The Savages Were Taught Concerning
The Catholic Religion. These Exercises Were Always Followed By Singing,
At The Conclusion Of Which The Congregation Was Dismissed, The
Christians Only Remaining To Take Part At Mass. This Service Was
Generally Followed By Prayers. During The Forenoon The Priests Were
Generally Engaged In Visiting The Sick And Consoling Those Who Were
Laboring Under Any Affliction. After Noon Another Service Was Held In
The Church, At Which All The Indians Were Permitted To Appear In Their
Finery And Where Each, Without Regard To Rank Or Age, Answered The
Questions Put By The Missionary. This Exercise Was Concluded By Singing
Hymns, The Words Of Which Had Been Set To Airs Familiar To The Savage
Ear. In The Evening All Assembled Again At The Church For Instruction,
To Hear Prayers And To Sing Their Favorite Hymns. The Miamis Were
Always Highly Pleased With The Latter Exercise.
Aside From The Character
Of The Religious Services Which Constituted A Chief Attraction In The
Miami Villages Of Indiana While The Early French Missionaries Were
Among Them, The Traveler's Attention Would First Be Engaged With The
Peculiarities Of The Fur Trade, Which During The First Quarter Of The
Seventeenth Century Was Monopolized By The French. This Traffic Was
Not, However, Confined To Those Whose Wealth Enabled Them To Engage
Vessels, Canoes And Carriers, For There Were Hundreds Scattered Through
The Various Indian Villages Of Indiana At Almost Any Time During The
First Half Of The Eighteenth Century, Who Carried Their Packs Of
Merchandise And Furs By Means Of Leather Straps Suspended From Their
Shoulders, Or With The Straps Resting Against Their Foreheads.
Rum And Brandy Were
Freely Introduced By The Traders, And Always Found A Ready Sale Among
The Miami Indians. A Frenchman, Writing Of The Evils Which Resulted
From The Introduction Of Spirituous Liquors Among These Savages,
Remarked: "The Distribution Of It Is Made In The Usual Way; That Is To
Say, A Certain Number Of Persons Have Delivered To Each Of Them A
Quantity Sufficient To Get Drunk With, So That The Whole Have Been
Drunk Over Eight Days. They Begin To Drink In The Villages As Soon As
The Sun Is Down, And Every Night The Fields Echo With The Most Hideous
Howling."
Indiana
Trading Posts
In Those Early Days The
Miami Villages Of The Maumee, Those Of The Weas About Ouiatenon, On The
Wabash, And Those Of The Piankeshaws Around Vincennes Were The Central
Points Of The Fur Trade In Indiana. Trading Posts Were Established At
These Places And At Fort Wayne In 1719, Although For Twenty Years
Previous The French Traders And Missionaries Had Frequently Visited
Them. A Permanent Church Or Mission Was Established At The Piankeshaw
Village Near Vincennes, In 1749, By Father Meurin, And The Following
Year A Small Fort Was Erected There By Order Of The French Government.
It Was In That Year That A Small Fort Was Erected Near The Mouth Of The
Wabash River. These Posts Soon Drew A Large Number Of French Traders
Around Them And In 1756 They Had Become Quite Important Settlements,
With A Mixed Population Of French And Indian.
At This Date The English
Became Competitors For The Trade With The Indians In Indiana And The
Surrounding Country, And At The Close Of The Old French War, In 1763,
When Canada And Its Dependencies Fell Into The Hands Of The British,
This Monopoly Passed Over To The Victors. Notwithstanding This Change
In The Government Of The Country, The French Who Had Settled Around The
Principal Trading Posts In Indiana, With A Few Exceptions, Swore
Allegiance To The British Government And Were Permitted To Occupy Their
Lands In Peace And Enjoy The Slight Improvements They Had Wrought.
Governed
From Vincennes
The Post, Or The Old
Post—later Known As Vincennes—was Established In 1727 And Until After
The Revolutionary War Was The Only White Settlement In Indiana,
Although French Military Forts Were Established Both At The Head Of The
Maumee And At Ouiatenon—the Latter On The Wabash, About Eighteen Miles
Below The Mouth Of The Tippecanoe. The Post At Ouiatenon Is Claimed To
Be The First Of Its Kind In Indiana And Dated From 1720. From Its
Settlement Until It Was Finally Transferred To Great Britain, Vincennes
Was Under The Jurisdiction Of New Orleans, Although Its Trade Was
Largely With Canada. It Was In Command Of A Governor, Francois Margane,
Sieur De Vincennes Holding That Office From The Founding Of The Post
Until His Death In 1736. During That Period, Therefore, Indiana Was
Under The Direct Jurisdiction Of Governor Vincennes, And Indirectly Of
New Orleans And Versailles.
Indiana
Under British Rule
Vincennes Was Slain In
Battle With The Indians At The Mouth Of The Ohio, In 1736, And Louis
St. Ange Commanded Old Vincennes Until 1764, Or A Short Time Before It
Was Finally Surrendered To The British. In May Of That Year, About Six
Months Previous To The Proclamation Of General Gage, The British
Commander-In-Chief In North America, Announcing The Cession Of The
Country Of The Illinois To His Britannic Majesty, St. Ange Appointed
His Successor To The Command Of The Old Post And Started For Fort
Chartres To Relieve The Commandant At That Post, Who Was On His Way To
New Orleans. For Nearly Thirty Years He Had Led And Governed The People
Of Old Vincennes.
Semi-Civil
Government At Fort Chartres
On The 10th Of October,
1765, St. Ange Made A Formal Delivery Of Fort Chartres To Captain
Sterling, Representing The British Government. That Military Center Of
The Illinois Country Became The First Semi-Civil Seat Of Government
Established Northwest Of The Ohio And Including The Present Territory
Constituting The State Of Indiana. Captain Sterling In Turn Received
His Orders From General Gage, Whose Headquarters Were At New York, The
British Seat Of Colonial Government In North America.
Fort Chartres Was A Very
Unhealthful Place And Captain Sterling, Its First British Commandant,
Lived Only Three Months After Taking Possession. In September, 1768,
Lieutenant Colonel Reed, In Command, Set Up A Sort Of Civil Government
For The Illinois Country. Its Main Feature Consisted Of The Seven
Judges, Who Constituted The First Court West Of The Alleghanies And
Retained Authority Until 1774, When The British Parliament Restored
Civil Law In Full Force.
Uncertain
French Titles To Lands
The Steps Leading To The
Formal Assumption Of The Civil Administration Of The Territory
Embracing Indiana By The Canadian Authorities, With Quebec As The Seat
Of The Dominion Government, Are Thus Epitomized: "The Arbitrary Act Of
General Gage, In 1772, In Ordering All The Whites To Immediately Vacate
The Indian Country, Aroused The Settlers And They At Once Vigorously
Protested. They Declared They Held The Title To Their Lands From
Officers Of The French Government, Who Had A Right To Convey Such
Titles, And That When The French Government Transferred The Territory
To The English Their Rights Were Duly Protected By The Treaty Of
Cession. Gage Was Autocratic And Determined, And On The Receipt Of This
Remonstrance He Ordered That All Written Titles To The Possession Of
The Lands Should He Forwarded To Him At New York For Examination. The
Inhabitants Were A Careless Set And Mainly Ignorant, And Had Failed To
Properly Care For The Written Evidence Of The Grants Made To Them, And
Many Of Them Had Been Left In The Hands Of The Notary Who Had Drawn
Them. They Never Dreamed Of Any Question Ever Being Raised As To Their
Right To The Lands They Were Occupying And Had Been Occupying For
Nearly Half A Century. So It Was That This Last Order Of Gage Fell Like
A Thunderbolt Upon The Poor Inhabitants. Some Deeds Were Found, But
Many More Could Not Be Found. An Appeal Was Made To St. Ange At St.
Louis. He Responded By Reciting That He Had Held Command Of The Post
(Vincennes) From 1736 To 1764, And That During That Time, By Order Of
The Governors, He Had Conceded Many Parcels Of Lands To Various
Inhabitants By Written Concessions, And Had Verbally Permitted Others
To Settle And Cultivate Lands, Of Which They Had Been In Possession For
Many Years. Other Officers Certified That Many Deeds Had Been Carried
Away, Others Removed To The Record Office Of The Illinois (At Fort
Chartres) And Still Others Had Been Lost Or Destroyed By Rats. But The
British Government Had Already Heard The Mutterings Of Discontent In
The Eastern Colonies And Did Not Want To Add To The Embarrassments At
Other Points, And In 1774 The Whole Territory Northwest Of The Ohio Was
Put Under The Dominion Of Canada."
As A
Part Of Canada
When The Illinois
Country, Or The Territory Northwest Of The Ohio, Was Transferred From
France To Great Britain About A Decade Before, The Entire Population
Did Not Exceed 600 Families, Or Perhaps 4,000 People, And When It Came
Under The Government Of Canada It Was Considerably Less, As Many Of The
Inhabitants Had Gone To St. Louis, New Orleans, And Other Points In
Louisiana.
The British Took
Possession Of Vincennes In May, 1777, But It Was Captured By The
Americans In August Of The Following Year, Who Relinquished It For
Three Months To The English, When It Was Recaptured By Gen. George
Rogers Clark And Became Forever A Possession Of The United States.
An
Extension Of Virginia
During The Revolutionary
War No British Or American Settlements Were Made Within The Limits Of
Indiana, Although While General Clark Was In Authority At Vincennes A
Number Of Americans Were Added To The Post Settlement, And The Indians
Ceded To The Commandant Himself 150,000 Acres Of Land Around The Falls
Of The Ohio River, Which Grant Was Afterward Confirmed By Virginia And
The National Congress. As An Energetic Kentuckian, An Able, Brave Man,
Of Military Genius, And Backed By The Old Dominion And The
Statesmanship Of Patrick Henry, Then Governor, General Clark Was
Admirably Fitted To Be The Conqueror Of The Northwest, Whether Fighting
Against The British Or The Indiana
In The
County Of Illinois
In 1778, When The News Of
Clark's Capture Of Vincennes And Kaskaskia Reached Virginia, Its
Assembly Passed A Law Organizing All The Territory Northwest Of The
Ohio Into The County Of Illinois And Placing Col. John Todd In Control
As County Lieutenant. As Kaskaskia Was The Seat Of Government, Indiana
Again Came Under A New Administration Centering Ultimately At Richmond,
Virginia. Todd Arrived At His Capital In May, 1779, And At Once
Commenced His Administration As County Lieutenant, Leaving Clark Free
To Pursue His Military Enterprises; But He Himself Was Killed At The
Battle Of Blue Licks In 1782. Although By Statute The Organization Of
The County Of Illinois Had Expired In 1781, Its Civil Officers
Continued To Exercise Power And Grant Land Concessions Until The
Passage Of The Ordinance Of 1787.
The
Northwest Becomes National Territory
We Now Approach The
Period Of Stable American Government, When The United States As A
Nation Extended Its Jurisdiction To The County Of Illinois And The
Territory Northwest Of The Ohio River. That Immense Domain Was Claimed
By Virigina By Right Of Conquest, But In January, 1783, The General
Assembly Of The Old Dominion, In The Interests Of The United States,
Ceded To The National Congress All Its Rights, Title And Claims To That
Great Land. The Virginia Deed Of Cession Was Accepted By Congress In
The Spring Of 1784, And In July, 1788, Gen. Arthur St. Clair, Who Had
Been Elected By Congress Governor Of The Northwest Territory Under The
Famous Ordinance Of The Previous Year, Arrived At Marietta, Ohio, To
Take Over The Civil Administration Of The National Domain Now Included
Within The States Of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan And Wisconsin.
At That Time, Therefore. The Future Hoosier State Was Governed
Indirectly From Philadelphia And Directly From Marietta, The
Territorial Capital.
Popular
Assembly For The Northwest Territory
Until Indiana Was
Organized As A Territory In 1800 There Were Few Settlements Within The
Limits Of The Present State. In 1798, Under The Provisions Of The
Ordinance Creating The Northwest Territory, And Providing That When Its
Population Should Number 5,000 Free Inhabitants, A Popular Assembly Was
Elected To Represent The Northwest, And In January, 1799, Convened At
Cincinnati, Whither The Seat Of Government Had Been Moved From
Marietta. Ten Members Of The Upper House, Of Council, Were Then
Appointed By President Adams, Upon Recommendation Of The Elected
Assembly, And When The Two Bodies Met At The New Territorial Capital In
September, 1799, A Near Approach To Popular Government Had Been
Effected In The Territory Northwest Of The Ohio River.
Indiana
Territory Created
The Legislature Selected
As The Territorial Delegate To Congress, William Henry Harrison, Who
Was Filling The Position Of Secretary Of The Northwest Territory. The
New Government Was Hardly Under Way Before The Tremendous Domain Over
Which It Had Jurisdiction Underwent Its First Carving, Under Authority
Of The Ordinance Of 1787. By Act Of Congress, Approved May 7, 1800, It
Was Declared That "From And After The Fourth Of July Next, All That
Part Of The Territory Of The United States Northwest Of The Ohio River
Which Lies To The Westward Of A Line Beginning At The Ohio Opposite The
Mouth Of The Kentucky River And Running Thence To Fort Recovery, And
Thence North Until It Shall Intersect The Territorial Line Between The
United States And Canada, Shall, For The Purpose Of Temporary
Government, Constitute A Separate Territory To Be Called The Indiana
Territory." The Seat Of Government Was Fixed At Vincennes And William
Henry Harrison Was Appointed Governor. He Reached Vincennes In January,
1801, The Gubernatorial Duties Having Been Performed Since The
Preceding July By John Gibson, Secretary Of The Territory.
First
Territorial Legislature
The Judges And Juries
Were Soon In Action And In July, 1805, The First Legislature Of The
Territory Of Indiana Met At Vincennes. At That Time Indiana Had Been
Shorn Of Michigan For About Six Months, And In 1809 Illinois Was Carved
Away, Leaving Its Territory As At Present.
Governor
Harrison, Father Of Indiana
Governor And General
Harrison Is Acknowledged To Be The Father Of A Settled And Secure
Indiana. Within Five Years From The Time He Assumeed Control Of
Affairs, Both Civil And Military, He Had Perfected Treaties With The
Indians Securing Cessions To 46,000 Square Miles Of Territory,
Including All The Lands Lying On The Borders Of The Ohio River, Between
The Mouth Of The Wabash River And The Western Boundary Of The State Of
Ohio. At The Same Time, In Co-Operation With The Legislature, He Guided
The Revision And Improvement Of The Territorial Statutes, And At His
Recommendation Congress Established Several Land Offices. In 1804 Three
Were Opened—at Detroit, Vincennes And Kaskaskia, Respeetively —and In
1807, A Fourth At Jeffersonville, Clark County.
Indian
Complaints Not Groundless
But Despite Treaties And
The Protection Of The National Government, Personified By Such A Rugged
Character As Harrison, The Original Lords Of The Soil Continued To Show
Just Causes For Uneasiness And Indignation. Even The Governor, In His
1806 Message To The Legislature, Remarked That They Were Already Making
Complaints, Some Of Them Far From Groundless. While The Laws Of The
Territory Provided For The Same Punishment For Offenses Committed
Against Indians As Against White Men, Unhappily There Was Always A Wide
Difference In The Execution Of Those Laws. The Indian Was, In All
Cases, The Sufferer. That Partiality Did Not Escape Their Observation.
On The Contrary It Afforded Them An Opportunity Of Making Strong
Comparisons Between Their Own Observance Of Treaties And That Of Their
Boasted Superiors.
During The Period From
1805 To 1810, Especially, The Indians Complained Bitterly Against The
Encroachments Of The Whites Upon The Lands Which They Had Not Ceded.
Not Only The Invasion Of Their Favorite Hunting Grounds, But The
Unjustifiable Killing Of Many Of Their People, Were Frequent Charges
Which They Brought To The Attention Of Harrison. An Old Chief, In
Laying The Troubles Of His People Before The Governor, Said Earnestly:
"You Call Us Your Children; Why Do You Not Make Us As Happy As Our
Fathers, The French, Did? They Never Took From Us Our Lands; Indeed,
They Were In Common Between Us. They Planted Where They Pleased; And
They Cut Wood Where They Pleased; And So Did We. But Now, If A Poor
Indian Attempts To Take A Little Bark From A Tree To Cover Him From The
Rain, Up Comes A White Man And Threatens To Shoot Him, Claiming The
Tree As His Own."
Tecumseh
And The Prophet Implacable
All Such Complaints Found
Voice In Tecumseh And His Brother, The Prophet, The One Playing Upon
The Superstitions And Passions Of The Indians And The Other Organizing
Them Into A Strong Confederacy, Which Was To Control The Disposition Of
Lands Instead Of Allowing Them To Be Ceded By Separate And Disunited
Tribes. Both In 1808 And 1809 The Prophet Visited Harrison At Vincennes
To Assure Him Of His Friendliness And To Protest Against The Charge
That He And Tecumseh Were In League With The British. In The Later Part
Of The Year 1809 It Was Estimated That The Total Quantity Of Land Ceded
To The United States Under Treaties Which Had Been Effected By The
Governor Exceeded 30,000,000 Acres; And All Of These Concessions Were
Accomplished In Direct Opposition To The Influence Of Tecumseh And The
Prophet; But The Break Between These Powerful Leaders Of The White And
The Red Races Was Near At Hand.
In July, 1810, Governor
Harrison Made An Attempt To Gain The Friendship Of The Prophet By
Sending Him A Letter Offering To Treat With Him Personally In The
Matter Of His Grievances, Or To Furnish Means To Send Him, With Three
Of His Principal Chiefs, To The President At Washington. The Bearer Of
This Letter Was Coldly Received Both By Tecumseh And The Prophet, And
The Only Answer He Received Was That Tecumseh, In A Few Days, Would
Visit Vincennes And Interview The Governor; This He Did, With Seventy
Of His Principal Warriors, In The Following Month. For Over A Week
Conferences Were Carried On With The Haughty Shawnee Chief, Who On The
20th Of August Delivered An Ultimatum To Harrison, To The Effect That
He Should Return Their Lands Or Fight.
While The Governor Was
Replying To Tecumseh's Speech, The Indian Chief Interrupted Him To
Declare Angrily That The United States Government, Through General
Harrison, Had "Cheated And Imposed On The Indians." Whereupon A Number
Of The Indian Warriors Present Sprung To Their Feet And Brandished
Their Clubs, Tomahawks And Spears. The Governor's Guards, Which Stood A
Short Distance Off, Marched Quickly Up, And The Red Men Quieted Down,
Tecumseh Being Ordered To His Camp.
On The Following Day
Tecumseh Apologized And Requested Another Interview. The Council Was
Thereupon Reopened, But While The Shawnee Leader Addressed Harrison In
A Respectful Manner, He Did Not Recede From His Former Demand As To The
Restoration Of The Indian Lands.
The Governor Then
Requested Tecumseh To State Plainly Whether Or Not The Lands Purchased
At The Treaty Of Fort Wayne In 1809 Could Be Surveyed Without
Molestation By The Indians, And Whether Or Not The Kickapoos Would
Receive Their Annuities In Payment For Such Cession. The Proposed Grant
Was Partly In Illinois. Tecumseh Replied: "Brother, When You Speak Of
Annuities To Me, I Look At The Land And Pity The Women And Children. I
Am Authorized To Say That They Will Not Receive Them. Brother, We Want
To Save That Piece Of Land. We Do Not Wish You To Take It. It Is Small
Enough For Our Purpose. If You Do Take It, You Must Blame Yourself As
The Cause Of The Trouble Between Us And The Tribes Who Sold It To You.
I Want The Present Boundary Line To Continue. Should You Cross It, I
Assure You It Will Be Productive Of Bad Consequences." This Talk
Terminated The Council.
On The Following Day
Governor Harrison, Attended Only By His Interpreter, Visited Tecumseh's
Camp And Told Him That The United States Would Not Acknowledge His
Claims. "Well," Replied The Indian, "As The Great Chief Is To Determine
The Matter, I Hope The Great Spirit Will Put Sense Enough Into His Head
To Induce Him To Direct You To Give Up This Land. It Is True, He Is So
Far Off He Will Not Be Injured By The War. He May Sit Still In His Town
And Drink His Wine, While You And I Will Have To Fight It Out."
Tecumseh's Last Visit To
The Governor Previous To The Battle Of Tippecanoe, Which Crushed The
Red Man's Power In Indiana And The Northwest, Was On July 27, 1811. He
Brought With Him A Considerable Force Of Indians, But That Showing Was
Offset By The 750 Well-Armed Militia Which Governor Harrison Reviewed
With Some Ostentation. The Interview Was Conciliatory On The Part Of
Tecumseh, Who, However, Repeated That He Hoped No Attempts Would Be
Made To Settle On The Lands Sold To The United States At The Fort Wayne
Treaty, As The Indians Wished To Keep Them For Hunting Grounds. He Then
Departed For The Express Purpose Of Inducing The Southern Indians To
Join His Confederacy.
The
Battle Of Tippecanoe
While Tecumseh Was Absent
On That Mission The Battle Of Tippecanoe Was Fought Under The
Leadership Of The Prophet, And Indiana Became White Man's Land Forever.
After Governor Harrison Had Exhausted Every Means To Maintain Peace
With The Indian Leader He Resorted To Decisive Military Measures. His
Army Moved From Vincennes In September, 1811; He Built A New Fort On
The Wabash In The Following Month, Resumed His March, And On The 6th Of
November, After An Unsatisfactory Conference With A Representative Of
The Prophet, About Half A Mile From The Town, Encamped On The
Battleground, Six Miles North Of The Present City Of Lafayette. The
Selection Of That Location Is Said To Have Been At The Suggestion Of
The Indians, Who Pronounced It A Good Place For A Camp; The Prophet May
Therefore To Be Said To Have Selected The Ground On Which His People
Met With Such Signal Defeat.
General Harrison's Force
Consisted Of About 250 Regular Troops, 600 Indiana Militia And 150
Volunteers From Kentucky. Just Before Daybreak Of The 7th Of November
The Indians Made A Sudden Attack On That Part Of The Camp Guarded By
The Militia. They Broke At The First Onslaught, But Soon Reformed, And
The Entire Body Of Americans Presented A Determined Front To The Wily
Foe, But Did Not Attempt An Offensive Until It Was Light, When Several
Gallant Charges Were Made By The Troops And The Indians Totally
Defeated. The Indians Being Familiar With The Ground Had Been Able To
Inflict Severe Losses On The Americans. Among The Killed Were Maj. Jo
Daviess, The Gifted And Brave Kentuckian And Col. Isaac White, The
Gallant Virginian, Who Fell Side By Side While Leading A Charge Of
Dragoons.
Sketch Of Col. Isaac White
By George F. White
It Is Gratifying To Know
That The County Was Named In Honor Of So Brave A Gentleman As Col.
Isaac White, An Interesting Sketch Of Whom Has Been Written By His
Grandson, George F. White. As Stated By The Author, "Much Of The
Information Was Gained Orally From His Father, Some From His Cousins In
Virginia And Some From Old Letters."
The Article Follows:
"Isaac White Was Born In Prince William County, Virginia, Shortly After
The Beginning Of The Revolutionary War. The Exact Year Is Not Known,
But From The Record Of His Initiation In 1811, As Member Of Vincennes
Lodge No. 1, F. & A. M., In Which He States His Age Was Then
Thirty-Five Years And From Certain Interesting Family Notes Written By
Mrs. Sarah M. Hayden, It Is Likely He Was Born In 1776. His Father Was
Probably Of English Origin And Was A Man Of Education, Refinement And
Good Standing For Before He Settled In Virginia, He Held A Captain's
Commission In The British Merchant Marine Service. Surrendering This
Office He Purchased A Large Tract Of Land In Prince William County, And
Devoted Himself To Farming Until The Revolution Began When He Took Up
Arms With The Colonies And Lost His Life, Near The Close Of The
Conflict, Nobly Battling For His Country.
"The Old House Where He
Lived, A Substantial Stone Structure, Indicating A Home Of Refinement
And Luxury, Is Still Standing In An Excellent State Of Preservation,
Near Brentsville, Virginia, The County Seat Of Prince William County.
In This Home Isaac White Was Born As Was Also His Elder Brother,
Thomas, And One Younger Sister, Katie, And Here He Continued To Live
With His Mother, Assisting Her As He Grew In Age And Experience Until
He Was Past Twenty-Three Years Old, When An Unhappy Event In His
Mother's Life Impelled Him And His Brother Thomas To Seek A More
Adventurous Career In The Great Northwest Territory.
"It Seems That One Day
When The Two Sons And All The Male Tenants Of The Plantation Were
Absent, A Strange Man Called At The House And Asked For Something To
Eat, And In Accordance With The Hospitality Of Those Days, His Request
Was At Once Granted But, Not Satisfied With Such Kindly Treatment, He
Demanded Of Her The Keys To The Drawers Where The Family Treasures Were
Kept. She Refused And He Tried To Get Them From Her By Force. Her
Screams Attracted The Attention Of A Neighbor Who, As The Account
States, Was 'A Bachelor Gentleman,' On A Hunting Expedition, Who Rushed
In And Brained The Would-Be Robber At Once. For This Chivalrous Act He
Was Arrested, Tried, Acquitted And Wholly Exonerated From All Blame. As
Stated, He Was 'A Bachelor Gentleman,' She A Widow. His Was A Heart
Innocent, Confiding And Susceptible, While She, Like Most Widows, Was
Conversant With All The Wiles And Snares Which So Beset The Pathway Of
Bachelors. He Was Weak. She Was Strong. He Surrendered: They Were
Married And 'Lived Happily Ever After.'
"Of Course Her Two Sons,
Thomas And Isaac, Objected To This Union, But To No Avail. However,
They Remained With Their Mother Until Their Sister Katie Was Married,
And Then With Only A Small Amount Of Money Left Home And Went To
Vincennes, Which Was Soon To Become The Capitol Of The Northwest
Territory. This Was In The Early Part Of The Year 1800. His Appearance
At Vincennes Created Some Excitement, As He Was Full Of Spirit, Well
Bred, Dashing And A General Favorite With All, But Especially With The
Young Ladies. Mrs. Hayden's Notes Are Full Of References To The Family
Of Judge George Leech, Then Living At Vincennes, And Especially Of His
Oldest Daughter, Sallie, Who Soon Succeeded In Capturing The Heart And
Affections Of Our Hero.
"Such, In Brief, Is The
Account Coming To Us From Mrs. Hayden, Whose Mother Was Formerly Miss
Amy Leech, A Sister To Sallie, Who Became The Wife Of The Subject Of
This Article. This Amy Leech Subsequently Became The Wife Of The Hon.
John Marshall, For Many Years President Of The Bank Of Illinois, At
Shawneetown, Illinois.
"Isaac White Was Somewhat
Aristocratic, His Wife Seems To Have Been An Honest Well-Meaning
Backward Girl Of Her Period, But Their Marriage Was A Most Happy One.
It Is Thought Judge Decker Officiated At The Wedding Which Was Some
Event As The Wedding Dinner Is Said To Have Been Quite An Elaborate
Affair.
"This Gentleman, Judge
George Leech, Into Whose Family Isaac White Married, Had Emigrated From
Louisville, Kentucky, To Vincennes, In 1784, And The Members Of His
Family Had Each Selected Homesteads In Knox County, But After Three
Years Of Hardships Among The Indians, All Except Francis Leech, Who Had
Died, Moved Back To Louisville, But Nine Years Later, In 1796, Judge
Leech Moved Back Again To Vincennes, But The Governor Of The Northwest
Territory Refused To Allow Him To Re-Occupy His Old Home, Though It Was
Vacant, And He Was Compelled To Occupy The Land Which Had Been His
Brother's. After William Henry Harrison Was Appointed Governor Of The
Northwest Territory, Judge Leech Was Granted One Hundred Acres More
Land Which He Gave As A Marriage Present To His Daughter, And To This
Day It Is Known As The 'White-Hall' Farm In Knox County, Indiana, And
This Was The Nucleus Of A Very Considerable Estate Which Isaac White
Acquired Subsequent To His Marriage.
"They Were Encompassed
With The Many Hardships Incident To Pioneer Life, But They Were
Surrounded By Good Neighbors And When Their Home Was Destroyed By Fire,
These Good Friends Rebuilt For Them A Substantial Log Residence In
Which Their Only Child, George Washington Leech White, Was Born. That
The Family Of Isaac White Was Refined And Highly Respectable Is Proven
By The Fact That A Strong Friendship Was Cemented Between It And The
Family Of Governor Harrison Which Has Been Transmitted To Their
Successors.
"On April 30, 1805,
Governor Harrison Appointed Isaac White Agent For The United States At
The Salt Works At Saline Creek, Illinois, Contiguous To The Village Of
Equality In Gallatin County, Illinois. Here Isaac Employed John
Marshall, A Man Of Sterling Character, Who Afterward Became A Banker
And Acquired A Splendid Reputation In Indiana And Illinois. The
Following Year Mr. Marshall Married The Younger Sister Of Mrs. White,
Miss Amy Leech. This Wedding Occurred October 21, 1806, And The Day
Following Both White And Marshall, Accompanied By Their Wives, Departed
For The Salt Works. On September 8, 1806, Gov. Harrison Appointed Isaac
White Captain Of The Knox County Militia And On September 10th, Of The
Same Year, His Oath Of Office Was Taken Before 'William H. Harrison.'
"The Salt Works Did Not
Long Survive. The Act Of Congress Of March 3,1803, Authorized The
Leasing Of The Springs Belonging To The Government And White, In 1807,
Had Acquired An Interest In The Salt Works Which He Held Until Just
Before His Death, When He Disposed Of It To Wilkes, Taylor & Co.,
And Returned To Vincennes.
"While Living At The Salt
Works He Had Two Daughters Born To Him, Harriet Grandison, June 12,
1808, And Juliet Greenville, On July 30, 1810. While He Was Employed At
The Springs, White Was Commissioned A Colonel, Probably In The Illinois
Militia, Which Organization Was Perfected Under The Act Of Congress Of
February 3, 1809. This Commission Is Now Lost But There Is Little Doubt
Of Its Having Been Issued To Him. Shortly After He Was Commissioned
Colonel, Occurred One Of The Most Important Incidents Connected With
His Life. Duelling Was At That Time, Not Uncommon, Especially In
Military Circles, But Col. White Had A Great Antipathy To That Method
Of Settling Differences That Arose Between Men. On May 23, 1811, He
Wrote A Tender And Pathetic Letter To His Wife Saying That On The Next
Day He Would Fight A Duel With One Captain Butler, Who Had Offended
Him, And When His Offense Had Been Resented Had Challenged Him And He
Had Accepted. He Tells His Wife In This Letter To Sell 'Sukey And The
Children' And From The Proceeds Buy A Slave In The Territory And Then
Having Written His Will, Bids His Wife A Tender Farewell.
"Their Meeting Took Place
On Time At A Place Now Called Union Springs, Kentucky, Opposite
Shawneetown, Illinois, But The Result Was Somewhat Different From What
Might Have Been Expected. By The Rules Governing The Code The
Challenged Party Could Choose The Weapons And The Distance; Availing
Himself Of This Privilege, Col. White Chose Horse Pistols At A Distance
Of Six Feet. Captain Butler Protested, Saying That It Meant Certain
Death To Both, But White Insisted That He Had The Right To Name The
Weapons And Fix The Distance Whereupon Butler Left The Field And The
Little Affair Of Honor Was Ended. In View Of The Ordinance Of 1787,
Which Prohibited Slavery In The Northwest Territory, It May Seem
Strange That He Would Advise His Wife To 'Sell Sukey And The Children'
And Invest The Proceeds In A Slave In The Territory, But It Is A Fact
That Slavery Existed For Many Years In The Territory And In That Part
Which Is Now Comprised Within The Limits Of Our Own State.
"The Records Of Vincennes
Lodge No. 1, F. & A. M., Disclose The Fact That On September 18,
1811, Isaac White Was Raised To The Sublime Degree Of A Master Mason In
Said Lodge, By Joseph Hamilton Daviess, Grand Master Of Kentucky.
Daviess Was A Major From Kentucky, Who Had Come To Vincennes To Offer
His Services To Gov. Harrison, In His Projected Campaign Against The
Indians, In The Wabash Valley. With The Consent Of His Friend, Major
Daviess, White Joined The Expedition In The Capacity Of A Private
Soldier, Which Accounts For His Name Being On The South Tablet Of The
Battle Ground Monument, Among The 37 Privates Killed In This Battle.
His Is The Last Name But One On This Tablet. They Left Vincennes On
September 26, 1811, And On Their Departure, Daviess And White,
Notwithstanding One Was A Major, And The Other A Private, Exchanged
Swords, And When They Were Afterwards Found On The Battlefield, Each
Had The Other's Sword. Lieut. George Leech, Brother-In-Law Of White,
Says Both Were Buried In One Grave Under An Oak Still Standing Not Far
From The Grave In Which The Other Dead Were Placed And Some Logs Were
Hastily Rolled Over The Grave And Burned That The Indians Might Not Be
Able To Discover And Loot The Grave, But All To No Avail, For As Soon
As The Soldiers Left, Their Bodies Were Exhumed By The Indians And Left
To Wither And Rot On The Ground. Isaac White Was Thirty-Six Years Of
Age When He Met His Death, Yet He Left, What For That Period, Was A
Considerable Fortune, For Notwithstanding His Well Known Liberality, He
Died Seized Of Several Thousand Acres Of Land In Addition To A Fair
Amount Of Personal Property. He Was A Man Of Chivalrous Manner, Kindly
And Generous Disposition And Well Beloved By His Associates. In 1816,
His Widow Married For Her Second Husband, Samuel Marshall, Brother Of
John Marshall, With Whom She Lived Until Her Death In 1819.
"Isaac White Left Three
Children, One Of Which, George Washington Leech White, Afterward Became
A Prominent Citizen Of Indiana And Served His Country In The Black Hawk
War;
"Harriet Grandison White,
Who Married Albert Gallatin Sloo, At 'White-Hall' Farm In Knox County,
And Juliet Greenville White, Who Married James Huffman. From Isaac
White's Son, Who Marriage Miss Eliza Griffin Fauntleroy, Of Kentucky,
Have Descended Many Quite Prominent People.
"By His Will, Written
With His Own Hand The Day Before His Duel Was To Have Been Fought With
Captain Butler, He Ordered The Payment Of All His Debts: To His Wife He
Gave All His Household And Kitchen Furniture And Two Hundred Acres Of
Land, In The Same Item Charging Her With The Proper Rearing Of His
Children, And Expresses The Hope That His Son, George, Be Given A
Classical Education And Especially That He Be Taught Fencing: As To The
Two Girls, They Were To Be Given 'A Good English Education.' He Gives
To His Neighbors, Charles White And John Justice 464 Acres And Seventy
Poles Of Land, One Moiety To Each, With Certain Restrictions, And Also
'To My Niece, Betsey White, One Mare, Saddle And Bridle,' To Be Worth
In Cash $100. Let Us Indulge The Hope That Betsey Fully Enjoyed Her
Equine Gift.
"The Will Then Gives To
His Son George All The Residue Of His Estate Out Of Which He Is To Pay
To His Sister Harriet, At Her Majority Or Marriage, $1,500 And To His
Sister Juliet On The Same Contingency He Is To Pay $1,000. This Will Is
Dated May 23, 1811, And Is Duly Witnessed By G. C. Harlt And Francis
Leech."
Several Counties In This
State Are Named In Honor Of Those Who Were Engaged In The Battle Of
Tippecanoe, And When White County Was Organized In 1834, It Took Its
Name From Isaac White, The Subject Of This Article. On November 7,
1836, The Twenty-Fifth Anniversary Of This Battle, John Tipton, Who
Then Owned The Tippecanoe Battle Ground, And Who Was Also Present In
The Engagement, Conveyed The Grounds To The State Of Indiana, And The
Constitution Of Our State Makes It Obligatory On The Legislature To
Forever Maintain It In Memory Of Those Who Participated In The Battle.
For Many Years Efforts Were Put Forth By Various Organizations To
Induce The State And Federal Governments To Erect A Monument Over The
Graves Of Those Who Were Buried There; But Not Until November 7, 1908,
Were Their Efforts Crowned With Success. On The Last Named Date, Being
The Ninety-Seventh Anniversary Of The Battle, Was Unveiled The Splendid
Obelisk Which Now Towers Over The Graves Where In Solitude And Silence
For More Than A Century, Have Lain The Bodies Of Those, Who Fell In
This Action. It Was, Judged From The Men Engaged, A Mere Skirmish, But
In Its Results, It Was One Of The Most Important Battles Ever Fought On
This Continent.
May We Ever Hold In
Loving Memory The Hero After Whom Our Goodly County Is Named!
Biography
By B. Wilson Smith
The Author Is Pleased To
Add To The Foregoing The Main Portions Of The Very Interesting
Biography Of Colonel White Written By B. Wilson Smith And Published In
The Historical Edition Of The Monticello Herald, December 8, 1910; The
Omissions Are Those Portions Of The Sketch Which Would Be But
Repetitions Of The Story Prepared By Colonel White's Grandson And Even
As Given There Are Necessarily Several Overlappings Of Facts In The Two
Papers.
"Thirteen Counties Of
Indiana," Says The Smith Biography, "Were Named For Heroes Who Fought
At Tippecanoe--Practically One-Seventh. That Battle Is Usually Measured
By The Number Engaged Rather Than The Mighty Issues Involved. It Is Too
Easily Forgotten That The Last And Greatest Indian Confederacy On This
Continent, Headed By The Greatest Of The Great Indian Warriors Of Our
History, Was Overthrown Just On The Eve Of Its Completion By The Clear
Comprehension Of General Harrison In Crushing This Gigantic Combination
Of So Many Tribes Before Its Consummation.
"For More Than Fifty
Years I Have Been A Gatherer Of Scraps Of Information Here And There Of
Events Of Our State Building, Which Unfortunately Had No Great
Chronicler Embodied In One Well Equipped Writer.
"Among The Notable Men
And Heroes Who Fought And Fell At Tippecanoe Was Col. Isaac White, For
Whom Our County Is Named. I Think Our School Children Ought To Be
Taught Thoroughly The Early History Of Their State, County And Towns—
Should Know These By Heart. These Things Should Be Taught At The
Fireside, In The Schools And By The Press. We Forget That Children
Learn History With Avidity Before They Can Grasp The Problem Of
Arithmetic. Memory Antedates The Reasoning Faculties.
"Col. Isaac White Was
Born In Prince William County, Virginia Shortly After The Commencement
Of The Revolutionary War. The Exact Date Of His Birth Is Not Now
Exactly Known, But From The Records Of His Initiation In 1811 As A
Member Of Masonic Lodge, No. 1, Of Vincennes, Indiana, In Which His Age
Is Stated To Be 35 Years, It Is Altogether Likely That He Was Born In
The Year 1776. His Father Was An Englishman By Birth And Held A
Commission As Captain Of British Marines. He Resigned His Commission
And Came To Virginia, Bought A Large Estate, And On The Breaking Out Of
The War Of Independence, Cast His Lot With The Oppressed Colonies, And
Fought Through The War Till Near Its Close, When He Lost His Life In
Defense Of His Adopted Country, He Left Three Children, Isaac, Thomas
And Daughter Katie. The First Lost His Life At Tippecanoe And The
Second Was Shot Through The Body In That Battle. It Was He Of Whom It
Is Told That The Surgeons Several Times Drew A Silk Handkerchief
Through The Wound To Cleanse It. Though Supposed To Be Mortally
Wounded, He Recovered.
"On Account Of The
Unsatisfactory Second Marriage Of Their Mother These Two Brothers Were
Impelled To Seek A New And More Adventurous Career In The Northwest
Territory. They Made Their Way To Vincennes, Soon To Become The Capital
Of Indiana Territory, In The Year 1800. They Were Not Heavily Cumbered
With Property But Had A Wealth Of Determination And Energy. Isaac
White, The Subject Of This Sketch, Soon After His Arrival Met The
Lovely And Accomplished Daughter Sallie Of Judge George Leech, Who Came
To Vincennes From Louisville, Kentucky, As Early As 1784, But After
Many Hardships, Ending With The Burning Of His Home Over His Head By
The Indians, Returned To Kentucky And Did Not Again Take Up His
Residence At Vincennes Till 1796. * * * Soon After The Organization Of
Indiana Territory, And The Coming Of Governor Harrison To Vincennes,
The Harrisons And Whites Became Very Intimate Friends. A Striking
Evidence Of This Is Shown By The Appointment Of Mr. White As Agent Of
The United States At The Salt Works On Saline Creek, In Gallatin
County, Illinois. The Following Is A Copy Of This Appointment:
"'Indiana Territory:
"'William Henry Harrison,
Governor And Commander In Chief Of The Indiana Territory.
"'[Seal.] To All Who
Shall See These Presents, Greetings:
"Know Ye, That In
Pursuance Of Instruction From The President Of The United States, I
Have Constituted And Appointed, And Do By These Presents Constitute And
Appoint Isaac White Of Knox County To Be Agent For The United States,
To Reside At The Salt Works On Saline Creek, For The Purpose Of
Receiving And Selling The Salt, And To Perform Such Other Acts And
Things As The Government Of The United States May Think Proper To
Charge Him With. This Commission To Continue During Pleasure.
"'Given Under My Hand And
The Seal Of The Territory, At Vincennes, This 30th Day Of April, 1805,
And Of The Independence Of The United States The Twenty-Ninth.
"'William Henry Harrison.
"'By The Governor.
"'Jno. Gibson, Secretary.
"During The Year 1806
Governor Harrison Appointed Mr. White A Captain In A Regiment Of Knox
County, Commission Dated Sept. 10th, 1806. (The Commission By Copy Is
Now Before Me). After A Short Service As Agent For The Government At
The Saline, He On The Change Of The Government As Agent, Became A
Lessee With Partners And During This Relation Acquired Considerable
Property. This Interest He Sold During The Summer Of 1811 And Removed
With His Family To Vincennes.
"It Is Claimed By Some
That He Was Appointed Colonel Of Illinois Militia During His Sojourn At
The Saline. (Illinois Was Organized As A Territory Feb. 3rd, 1809.) But
I Am Quite Sure This Is A Mistake. He Never Was Colonel Of An Illinois
Regiment, And Never Brought An Illinois Company With Him To The Battle
Of Tippecanoe, But He Was Colonel Of The 3rd Regiment Of Indiana
Militia And Tendered This Regiment To Governor Harrison For The
Expedition To The Prophets' Town.
"A Very Important
Incident Occurred In Col. White's Life Just Before Leaving The Saline
In Illinois During The Year 1811. He Was Challenged To Fight A Duel By
One Mr. Butler. Though, Unlike Most Virginians Of That Day, He Was
Morally Opposed To Dueling, Yet He Thought There Were Cases Where It
Could Not Be Avoided. Particularly A Military Man When Challenged Could
Not Decline. Col. White Accepted, Chose Horse Pistols As The Weapons,
And Six Paces As The Distance. The Meeting Place Was Union Springs,
Kentucky, Opposite Shawneetown, Illinois. All Parties Were On Time At
The Meeting, But When The Terms Became Known, The Challenger And His
Friends Objected To The Conditions As Not Offering Any Chance For The
Escape Of Either Challenger Or Challenged. Col. White And His Friends
Stood Firmly By The Terms, And The Challenger And His Friends Abruptly
And Precipitately Withdrew. The Want Of Space Forbids The Insertion Of
Col. White's Letter To His Wife On The Eve Of This Occurrence.
"Soon After Col. White's
Sale Of His Interest In The Illinois Salt Works And His Return To
Vincennes, He Was Entered And Passed As An Apprentice And Fellowcraft
Mason In The Masonic Lodge At Vincennes Then Under The Jurisdiction Of
The Grand Lodge Of Kentucky, And On The 18th Of September, 1811, He Was
Raised To The Sublime Degree Of A Master Mason By His Friend The
Celebrated Colonel Joseph H. Daviess, Grand Master Of Kentucky, Who Had
Come To Vincennes To Offer His Services To Governor Harrison In An
Expected Campaign Against The Confederated Indians At The Prophet's
Town.
"Col. White Earnestly
Solicited Governor Harrison To Have His Regiment (The 3rd Indiana
Militia), Or At Least A Part Of It, Included In The Forces Of The
Expedition But Was Told That The United States Troops Then On The
Way—the 4th Regiment From Pittsburgh And The Other Forces Already
Organized, Would Be Sufficient For The Expedition. But He Was Not To Be
Deterred, And With Thomas Randolph, Late Attorney General Of The
Territory, He Enrolled Himself In The Company Of Dragoons Commanded By
Captain Parke, Which Company And Two Others Were Placed, As A Squadron
Of Dragoons, Under Command Of His Friend Col. Daviess. An Incident Of
This Early Soldier Association Is Worthy Of Mention. Col. Daviess And
Col. White, Exchanged Swords And On The Fatal November Morning,
November 7th, The Sword Of Col. White Was Found Buckled To The Belt Of
Col. Daviess, And The Sword Of Col. Daviess Was Found Held In The Iron
Grip Of His Friend Col. White. They Had Fallen Side By Side In That
Fatal Charge. White Was Stark And Cold In Death, And Daviess, Though
Living, Was Pierced By Three Balls In The Breast, Either Of Which Would
Have Been Fatal. The Flash Of His Pistol Had Exposed Him To The Deadly
Aim Of Three Savages.
"At Daylight The Battle
Of Tippecanoe Was Won--But At What A Fearful Price! Of The Nine Hundred
Men, One Hundred And Eighty-Three Killed And Wounded, Of Whom
Thirty-Seven Were Killed In Action And Twenty-Five Died Of Their Wounds.
"And Now, Side By Side,
These Two Noble Patriot Friends Sleep Their Last Sleep, And With Them
In The Same Grave, Their Common Friend, Col. Owen, An Aid To General
Harrison, Who Fell Early In The Action At The Side Of His Commander. On
The Battlefield Markers Tell Where Daviess And Owen Fell, But By
Inexcusable Ignorance No Marker Tells Where Col. White Fell, Nor Is His
Name On The Monument Among The Officers, But In The List Of Privates.
Will White County Permit This Neglect Of The Gallant Soldier Whose Name
She Bears?"
Indian
Stragglers Settle In White County
Milton
M. Sill, In His Unpublished "History Of White County," Has This To Say
About One Aftermath Of The Battle Which Specifically Relates To Home
Matters: "After The Decisive Battle Of Tippecanoe With The
Pottawattamie Indians, And Their Defeat And The Destruction Of Their
Principal Town At The Mouth Of The Tippecanoe River, The Remnant Of
That Tribe, Fleeing North, Settled At Various Points On The River (Two
Within The Limits Of White County) And Built Villages. One Of Their
Villages Was Located On The West Bank Of The River Half A Mile Above
Monticello, And The Other Five Miles Further North On The East Bank
Near What Was Afterward Known As Holmes' Ford. At Both The Villages A
Small Patch Of Ground Was Cultivated In Corn, All The Labor Being
Performed By The Squaws, The Men Deeming It Beneath Their Dignity To
Perform Menial Labor Until They Became Too O1d For War Or The Chase;
And Even Then They Avoided Any Manual Labor By Being Installed Members
Of What They Called The Council.
"The Pottawattamies Were
Divided Into Two Distinct And Separate Bands Or Tribes, Each Having A
Head Man Or Chief, And Having Little, If Any, Communication. By Far The
Larger Section Of The Tribe Inhabited Southern Michigan And A Part Of
Northern Indiana. They Were Under The Guidance Of A Chief Called
Pokagon, Who Lived To A Great Age, And Was Distinguished For His Firm
And Unswerving Friendship For The White Settlers And His Unflinching
Integrity, As Wel1 As His Scholarly Attainments Which Were By No Means
Limited." As We Know, The Other Tribe Was Controlled By The Unfortunate
Prophet.
Changes
In Governors And Capitals
Governor Harrison's
Prolonged Absences From The Seat Of Government On Military Duties Made
It Necessary To Place The Civil Administration In Other Hands. In 1812
And The First Four Months Of 1813 These Responsibilities Devolved On
John Gibson, Secretary Of The Territory. In February Of The Latter Year
President Madison Nominated Thomas Posey, United States Senator From
Louisiana, For Governor Of Indiana, As General Harrison Had Been Made
Commander-In-Chief Of The American Forces In The West. Governor Posey
Arrived At Vincennes In May, 1813, And In December Of That Year The
Legislature Met At The New Capital-- Corydon, Harrison County. The
State House At That Place Had Been Partially Erected In 1811, But Was
Not Entirely Completed Until 1815.
State
Constitution Adopted At Corydon
In December Of The Latter
Year, The Territory Of Indiana Applied To Congress For Admission Into
The Union As A State, Since More Than 60,000 Free White Inhabitants
Then Resided Within Its Limits—to Be Exact, 63,897. Congress Passed The
Enabling Act In May, 1816, And The Delegates Elected To Frame A State
Constitution Held A Convention At Corydon, Lasting From The 10th To The
29th Of June, Of That Year. Instead Of Deliberating In The Stuffy
Little State House They Held Most Of Their Meetings Under A Huge Elm
Tree On The Banks Of Big Indian Creek, Several Hundred Feet Northwest
Of The Capitol. The Grand Old Tree Still Stands, Fifty Feet In Height
With A Spread Of Branches Nearly 125 Feet Across. The First Session Of
The Legislature Of The State Of Indiana Opened At The Corydon State
House On November 4, 1816.
Indianapolis
Fixed As Permanent Capital
Corydon Remained The
State Capital Until 1825, Although The Site Of Indianapolis Had Been
Selected By The Commissioners Appointed For That Purpose By The
Legislature In 1820. In 1819 Congress Had Donated To The State Four
Sections Of Land To Be Selected From Any Tract Of The Public Domain
Then Unsold, And In May Of The Following Year The Locating
Commissioners Fixed Upon A Tract On The West Fork Of White River Near
The Geographical Center Of The State And Platted The New Capital As
Indianapolis. The Seat Of Government Of The Commonwealth Was Moved
Thither In 1825, As Stated, And The First State House Completed In
1836. As Designated In The Congressional Grant, Indianapolis Was Fixed
As The Permanent Capital Of Indiana, And All Its Counties Have Since
Looked To That City As The Seat Of Their Governmental Authority. The
Transfer Of That Center From Corydon Was Effected Seven Years Before
White County Was Created.
Source. A Standard History of White County, Indiana 1915