Part 18 (1/2)
[462] P. R. O., CO5-1371-330, 331.
[463] P. R. O., CO1-20, 21.
[464] P. R. O., CO1-30-71.
[465] P. R. O., CO1-37-1.
[466] P. R. O., CO1-40-54.
[467] Mr. P. A. Bruce, in his Inst.i.tutional History of Virginia in the Seventeenth Century, has shown that this statement is incorrect.
[468] P. R. O., CO1-26-77.
[469] P. R. O., CO1-36-37; CO1-36-54.
[470] P. R. O., CO1-30-51.
[471] P. R. O., CO1-30-78.
CHAPTER VI
BACON'S REBELLION
For many years Virginia had been at peace with the neighboring Indians.[472] The long series of wars which had filled most of the first half of the seventeenth century had broken the spirit and power of the Pamunkeys, the Nansemonds and the Nottoways.[473] The remnants of these nations had become dependent upon the English, paying them tribute and looking to them for protection from their enemies.[474] In 1675, however, these friendly relations were disturbed by a southward movement of some of the northern Indians. Large bodies of the warlike Senecas, pressing upon the Susquehannocks at the head of the Chesapeake Bay, were driving them down into Maryland and Virginia. Here their indigence and their restlessness became a menace to the whites and an element of disturbance to their relations with the other tribes.[475]
In the summer of 1675 a party of savages rowed across the Potomac river, committed several murders and made good their escape into Maryland.[476]
In anger and alarm the planters of Stafford county seized their arms to protect their homes and to avenge their neighbors. A band of thirty or more, led by Colonel Mason and Captain Brent, pursued the savages up the Potomac into the Maryland woods.[477] Coming in the early dawn upon two diverging trails, ”each leader with his party took a separate path”. ”In less than a furlong either found a cabin”, one crowded with Doeg Indians, the other with Susquehannocks. The king of the Doegs, when he saw his hut surrounded by Brent's men, ”came trembling forth, and wou'd have fled”. But Captain Brent, ”catching hold of his twisted lock, which was all the hair he wore”, commanded him to deliver up the men guilty of the recent murders. ”The king pleaded ignorance and slipt loos”, whereupon Brent shot him dead. At this the savages in the cabin opened fire, and the Virginians answered with a deadly volley. ”Th' Indians throng'd out at the door and fled.” ”The English shot as many as they cou'd, so that they killed ten ... and brought away the kings son.” ”The noise of this shooting awaken'd th' Indians in the cabin which Coll.
Mason had encompa.s.sed, who likewise rush'd out and fled, of whom his company shot ffourteen.”[478]
This unfortunate affair was the beginning of a deadly war between the English and the Indians, which brought untold suffering upon the people of Maryland and Virginia. The Susquehannocks, enraged at the slaughter of their warriors, became the most implacable enemies of the white men.
Joining with the other tribes in a league against the English, they began a series of outrages and murders which continued many months, and cost the lives of hundreds of men, women and children. During the year 1676 alone, more people were butchered in Virginia by the savages than fell in the ma.s.sacre of 1644.[479] This fearful mortality was due to the fact that the Indians were now supplied with firearms. Governor Berkeley and his friends, in their greed to secure the valuable beaver and otter skins, had not hesitated to purchase them with powder, shot and guns.[480] The savages had now almost entirely discarded the bow and arrow, and were so skilful with their new weapons that the English often hired them ”to kill Deare”.[481] So that when the war cry was once more heard upon the frontier, the savages, although less numerous than in the days of Powhatan or Opechancanough, were far more to be feared.
It was Maryland that first felt the resentment of the savages.
[Ill.u.s.tration: MAP OF
VIRGINIA
DURING BACON'S REBELLION]
The people of this province had taken no part in the attack of Mason and Brent, but the Susquehannocks were not in the humor to make nice distinctions. In seeking revenge for the murder of their braves they held all whites equally guilty, and fell immediately upon the nearest plantations. Thus were the Marylanders made to suffer for the rashness of the Virginia frontiersmen.
Feeling that it was his duty to aid the neighboring province in this war brought on by the hasty action of two of his own officers, and fearing that depredations upon the Virginia frontiers could not long be prevented, Sir William Berkeley decided to join Governor Calvert in a vigorous attack upon the savages. Colonel John Was.h.i.+ngton, great-grandfather of George Was.h.i.+ngton, at the head of several hundred men, was despatched across the Potomac to effect a junction with the Maryland troops.[482] The combined forces of the two colonies are said to have numbered ”neer a thousand men”.[483]
Unable to withstand this army in the open field, the Indians fell back upon a fort which they had erected upon the north bank of the Potomac, and here awaited the approach of the English. Their fortress had been constructed with such care and skill that the white men were unable to carry it by storm. The outer works consisted of lines of tree trunks, from five to eight inches in diameter, ”watled 6 inches apart to shoot through”, their tops firmly twisted together. Behind this was a ditch, and within all a square citadel, with high walls and ”fflankers having many loop-holes”. The fire of the red-skins from behind these works proved so deadly that hopes of a successful a.s.sault had to be abandoned.
Nor could breaches be effected, for the allies were not provided with heavy guns. The moist and swampy ground surrounding the fort made it impossible to approach by means of trenches.[484]
So the English cast their camp before the fort hoping to starve out the enemy. Lines were drawn about the place, as closely as the nature of the ground would permit, while boats patrolled the river to cut off escape to the Virginia sh.o.r.e. Fearing, no doubt, that lack of provisions would soon make it necessary for them to come to terms with the besiegers, the Indians sent out several of their leaders to treat for peace. But so deep was the animosity aroused by the recent murders, that the white men violated the flag of truce by detaining these envoys, and finally beating out their brains.[485] This flagrant act aroused the Indians to a desperate defense. In numerous sallies they inflicted severe loss upon the besiegers, and captured enough horses to supply themselves with food. At last, after six or seven weeks of fighting, they resolved to effect their escape. On a dark night, when the English were least expecting it, they sallied forth, bringing with them their women and children. Awakening the white men with their savage yells, they burst in among them, killing and wounding many, and before resistance could be made, were through the lines and gone.[486]