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A High Wind Rising
by Robert Cheeks
Mounting antagonisms among French, English, and Native
constituencies.
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Click on image for enlarged view.
Ohio-Alleghania Frontier
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By May of 1754 the critical situation on the Ohio-Alleghenia
frontier was quickly reaching denouement. The month before an advance force
of French Troupes de la Marine and auxiliaries arrived at the Virginia
Colony's Fort Trent on the forks of the Ohio River. And with the fleur
de lis unfurled and gracefully flowing in the evening air the French
required the youthful Ensign Edward Ward to surrender his command of thirty-three
militiamen1. Under the able leadership
of Captain Claude Pierre Pecaudy de Contrecoeur, the confrontation with
these Virginia Provincials did not culminate in bloodshed. However, it
did signify an act of provocation, if not war2.
Contrecoeur's orders were to construct his own fort at
this place, an establishment that would complete the chain of forts built
the previous year at Venago, Le Boeuf, and Presquisle linking the Ohio
River to Lake Erie. Contrecoeur began at once to tear down Fort Trent and
begin construction of Fort Duquesne, named in honor of the Governor-General,
Ange Duquesne de Menneville, marquis Duquesne3.
The race between France and England to control the Ohio
frontier had been won by the French, but off to the southeast a colonial
force, though few in number, marched with an aplomb that denied their lack
of experience, training, and station in life. Under the leadership of twenty-two
year old Lieutenant Colonel George Washington, the Virginia advance force
counted among its meager ranks two companies of Virginia militia under
Captain Peter Hogg and Lieutenant Jacob Van Braam, a man destined to suffer
the imputations of his comrades-in-arms4.
By April 23, Washington's command, enlarged by the arrival of Captain Adam
Stephen's company, reached the Wills Creek station owned by the Ohio Company,
a business venture initiated by eleven of Virginia's leading citizens -
including Lt. Col. Washington's older brother, Lawrence - whose primary
purpose was the acquisition of land west of the Allegheny Mountains. As
a result of their machinations and duplicitous treatment of the Ohio-Alleghenia
nations at the Loggs Town council two years earlier in 1752, the French
had received word of the Virginians' efforts to obtain a 500,000-acre tract
of land southeast of the Ohio River. This intelligence prompted the French
authorities to act with alacrity5.
Upon Washington's arrival at Wills Creek, Ensign Ward
reported the loss of the fort. News also reached the camp that Tanaghrisson
- the Half King, one of two headmen at Loggs Town - had sent along a message
for Virginia Lieutenant Governor Robert Dinwiddie. The message declared
Tanaghrisson's willingness to lead the Ohio-Alleghenia nations into battle
against the French alongside his English allies6.
Fearing French reprisals against his Loggs Town allies the young commander
decided to push his force of some 180 effectives into the interior. Further,
the command would advance as far as Captain William Trent's Ohio Company
storehouse at Redstone Creek and stockpile their ammunition, victuals,
and cannon7. While they awaited
the arrival of reinforcements, they would execute the second element of
their orders, to cut a road through the forest wide enough to allow the
baggage and artillery trains to pass.
But all of these plans came to nought. When Washington's
file debouched the forest southeast of the Great Meadows, a pleasant valley
several hundred yards wide and a couple of miles long located between the
Laurel Mountain and Chestnut Ridge, a place he visited during his journey
to Venago, he determined to encamp and fortify8.
The Virginia Provincials built an entrenchment and started
work on what would become "Fort Necessity." Meanwhile, Washington received
numerous reports from Tanaghrisson, his Mingo scouts, and colonial traders
skedaddling out of the Ohio country, indicating the presence of French
detachments scouting well to the southeast of Fort Duquesne. A voluminous
correspondence flew from the Great Meadows to Williamsburg with Lt. Col.
Washington spending a great deal of time grousing about the paucity of
food, reductions in pay, and difficult "...duty that is almost inconsistent
with that of a Soldier9."
On the morning of May 27 Christopher Gist9a
came into camp reporting that a significant French force of fifty coureurs
de bois under M. LaForce had visited his station thirteen miles northwest
of the Great Meadows. The enemy's tracks led to within five miles of the
provincials' camp, and Washington responded by sending Captain Hogg and
75 militia on a scout towards the northwest. The following day Tanaghrisson
signaled Washington that the enemy's tracks had been located in an "obscure
retreat," prompting the Virginia commander and a detachment of militia
to journey through a pitch-black, rainy night to Tanaghrisson's camp. They
parlayed early the next morning and determined to take the Frenchmen.
By 7:00 a.m. Tanaghrisson led the provincials to the Frenchmen's
enclave, and while Captain Stephen took the left of the ravine (Jumonville's
Glen), Washington posted his troops on the exposed right, as Tanaghrisson
and his Mingos worked themselves around to the rear. Washington's movement
was detected by the French, some of whom were only partially dressed, and
they ran for their muskets. Washington gave the order to volley into the
enemy, and that was immediately followed by return fire. In their exposed
position the French were easy targets for the provincials, who continued
to pour a devastating musketry into their midst. The French fell back directly
into the path of Tanaghrisson and his Mingos. After fifteen minutes the
fire fight was over and the French threw down their arms. The Mingos quickly
raced to Jumonville's wounded, cut their throats, and lifted their scalp
locks in a victory coup. The dead, as well, were scalped10.
The French detachment, under the command of Ensign Coulon
de Jumonville de Villiers, carried two sets of orders from Contrecoeur,
the commandant at Fort Duquesne. The first stated that the objective of
the detachment was to warn Englishmen peaceably away from the country;
the second declared Jumonville's obligation to scout the area and send
back to the fort any intelligence the party gathered.
The next day, Scarouady, Tanaghrisson's co-counsel at
Loggs Town, left with the scalps and belts of black wampum for the Ohio
Country. His mission was to call on the Shawnee and Delaware and invite
them to war on the French. But he failed and upon his return, later in
the month, to put the torch to Loggs Town10a.
On May 30, 1754 Colonel Fry died as the result of a fall
and temporary command of the Virginia Provincial Regiment devolved onto
young Lt. Col. Washington. He was now back at the Great Meadows, expanding
the entrenchments, erecting palisades, and constructing a small cabin11.
Two days later Tanaghrisson arrived at the Great Meadows with the Mingo
remnant from Loggs Town: about a hundred souls in all, men, women, and
children. Washington suggested that the women, children, and old men unable
to fight continue on to the Virginia towns, but Tanaghrisson would not
hear of separating his people. On June 9th Adjutant (Major) George Muse
led two companies of provincials under the commands of Andrew Lewis and
Robert Stobo, counting 110 effectives and five officers, to the Great Meadows.
Accompanying the militia were the traders and Indian interpreters George
Croghan, who had failed to keep his contract for supplying the expedition,
and his half-breed associate Andrew Montour, with wampum for Tanaghrisson
from the Virginia governor. Muse also carried orders from Dinwiddie promoting
Washington to Colonel and overall command of the Virginia Regiment; Muse
was upgraded to Lieutenant Colonel, and Captain Stephen to Major. However,
command of the expedition was given to Col. James Innes of North Carolina,
who at this time was moving his force of three hundred British Regulars
to the Virginia theater12.
On June 10th an independent company numbering a hundred
riflemen from South Carolina and Georgia marched smartly into the camp
at the Great Meadows under the command of an officer of the British Army.
Upon formal introductions, the company commander, Captain James Mackey,
informed Col. Washington that a royal commission superseded any commission
signed by a colonial governor. Nevertheless, given the delicate nature
of the occasion, there developed a certain alliance between the two men13.
With the arrival of these reinforcements Washington felt
emboldened to act. Leaving Captain Mackey's regulars behind - with the
captain's approval - to guard the camp at the Great Meadows, Washington,
on June 16th, loaded the swivel guns on wagons and marched the regiment
northwest to Gist's Station. While Washington set up his base, he sent
a work detail off to expand the road to Redstone while he awaited the arrival
of "forty Indians from the Ohio14."
The parlay, a three-day affair, was not fruitful, and the Indians left,
undoubtedly stopping at Fort Duquesne to report on Washington's force and
receive their "gifts." Ominously, Tanaghrisson and his Mingos returned
to the Great Meadows.
Work continued on the road for ten more days under arduous
conditions, while the men were supplied with the poorest quality of victuals.
On June 27th a runner brought the news of Scarouady's decision to burn
his village of Loggs Town and move his two hundred people under English
protection. However, the wily Mingo headman stopped at Fort Duquesne and
received information that the French were ready to move on Washington's
Virginia Regiment, news he quickly relayed to the colonel. Washington ordered
the road builders back to Gist's Station and sent word to Captain Mackey
asking for his assistance15.
Mackey's command arrived two days later, and the officers
immediately went into council. It was determined that due to the fact that
the "neighboring heights" commanded Gist's Station, the Virginians and
the Independent Company would fall back on their Great Meadows camp. Washington
had only two wagons remaining after earlier sending back the others for
supplies at the Great Meadows; consequently he impressed Croghan's two
wagons to help carry his stores. Because of the paucity of transportation
the Virginians were required to carry the swivel guns by hand. Captain
Mackey, continuing to adhere to army policy, refused to permit his men
to participate in the labor, which under army regulations required extra
pay.
The thirteen-mile journey to the Great Meadows required
two grueling days of forced marching. The soldiers arrived exhausted and
famished only to discover that the prayed-for provisions had not arrived.
Any further retreat was out of the question; the Virginia Regiment and
the Independent Company simply did not have the strength to continue on
to Wills Creek.
By the middle of June, Fort Duquesne had the look of a
significant outpost. Indians from Canada, Detroit, and the Ohio country
had gathered at that place rallying under the aegis of the fleur de
lis. Abnakis, Algonquins, Hurons, Nipissings, Ottawa, Potawatomies,
Chippewas, Mississaugi, Wyandot, Shawnee, Delaware, and even some of the
Mingo now supported the French. The Delaware and Mingo contingent that
a few days earlier treated with Washington returned and reported the condition
of the provincial forces. In the meantime, Captain Contrecoeur's considerable
force of Troupes de la Marine, coureurs de bois, and Indians at
Fort Duquesne was augmented on June 27 with reinforcements from Montreal
under the command of Captain Coulon de Villiers. Contrecoeur had already
issued orders to strike the provincials the next day with 500 auxiliaries
under the command of Chevalier Le Mercier, but de Villiers' seniority and
the fact that the "martyred" M. Jumonville was his brother17,
Contrecoeur gave the command to him.
On June 28th de Villier's legion of 600 Troupes de
la Marine and coureurs de bois supplemented by a hundred Indians
representing nine nations17a
pushed off the shore line in large canoes and paddled swiftly up the Monongahela
River, reaching Redstone Station two days later. The French commander immediately
dispatched his Indian scouts to the southwest. Quickly they returned, reporting
the news that the English were entrenching at Gist's Station. Villiers
piled his supplies nearby and ordered the advance; he would fight the English
at Gist's.
Not until July 2nd did the French make Gist's Station;
but they found the post almost abandoned, managing to capture a young lady
named Elizabeth Williams and three traders: Andrew McBriar, John Kennedy,
and Nehemiah Stevens18.
Villiers determined to continue the pursuit, spurred on
by a report from a traitor named John Ramsey, who voluntarily detailed
the deteriorated condition of young Colonel Washington's command. The French
contingent swiftly filed through the cut in the Laurel Mountain in a dismal
rain as scouts came in reporting the good news that the English were entrenching
at the Great Meadows a few miles southeast.
Villers ordered a halt and allowed his men a brief respite
while he and a small party journeyed to the ravine a few miles away, where
his kin de Jumonville and his men had been ambushed. M. Villiers noted
in his report "Here I saw some bodies still remaining19."
At Fort Necessity Tanaghrisson and Queen Allaquippa, disheartened
by the inept preparations being made to meet the enemy, abandoned their
allies.
No sooner had daylight begun to break on July 3rd than
a scouting party came in carrying a wounded sentinel. The alarm was sounded
as the various companies abandoned their work on what was now dubbed "Fort
Necessity," fell in, and prepared to meet the French.
Villiers moved his command southwest of the fort, debouched
the wooded hillside in three columns, kicked out a skirmish line, and advanced
at regular time across the open field. Washington and Mackey moved the
majority of their 284 effectives out of the works, dressed their ranks,
and awaited the pleasure of their enemy. But Villiers saw no reason to
uselessly expose "... the lives of the King's subjects20."
The Provincials and Captain Mackey's regulars held formation
in the face of the French advance, waiting patiently for the order to fire.
To their rear Major Stephen ordered several of the swivel guns rammed with
shot and fired across the open meadow. But the effect was limited, though
the French halted two hundred yards from the fort and with admirable precision
fired a volley toward the English. The distance was too great to do any
damage, and following the dictums of the musket drill they reloaded, advanced,
and fired again with similar ineffectual results21.
Washington and Mackey then ordered their soldiers to retire
onto the entrenchments. The French closed smartly to within sixty yards
of the English line, then swung about to the southeast and two hillocks
that commanded the fort and lay within easy musket range.
The French had the advantage of concealment in the woods
and were able first, to knock down the cattle and horses, and second, to
deliver a steady "galling" fire on the trenches, palisades, and cabin.
It was as Washington later reported, "an unequal fight." Any return fire
on the part of the English, was at an unseen enemy.
Then, to complicate matters it rained profusely. The trenches
began to fill, the already soft earth quickly turned to mud, and the soldiers
sank in. The rain fouled their muskets, and the regiment had only two mechanical
screw-rods to clear the damp charges. By late afternoon, a paucity of powder
and ball forced the English to slacken their fire.
But action was not lacking in all this. Col. Muse committed
some indiscretion - the allegation was cowardice - that has not come down
to us fully explained. Then a goodly number of the regiment broke into
the rum supply in the cabin and got blindly inebriated, no doubt placing
young Col. Washington in a state of high dudgeon22.
Just after dark, following a sharp increase in musketry,
the French called for a parley. Captain Villiers later wrote, "As we had
been wet all day by the rain, as the soldiers were very tired, as the savages
said that they would leave us the next morning, as there was a report that
drums and the firing of cannon had been heard in the distance, I proposed
to M. Le Mercier to offer the English a conference23."
Villiers signaled the fort that he wished to discuss terms,
but Washington, worried that it might be a French artifice, declined. For
a time there were shouts across the line from both sides until a compromise
had been reached: the French would treat with an English officer at their
position and they would guarantee his safety.
Because of their bilingual skills, the colonel sent Captain
Jacob Van Braam and Chevalier de Peyrouny, an ensign, who was "dangerously
wounded24." After receiving the
colonel's instructions, they slogged across the muddy field to treat with
Captain Villiers and his second M. LeMercier.
In a short time the two returned to Fort Necessity with
Villiers's verbal offer: the French would show mercy and allow the English
to retire with the honors of war, leaving only their cannon - less one
piece, signifying a tribute to the courage of the enemy. However, if they
offered any "obstinate resistance" he could very easily lose control of
his Indian allies and a massacre might ensue.
Col. Washington's command was in dire straits; over a
hundred soldiers were sick, and casualties had been significant. His only
hope lay in a frontal assault on the fort by the enemy, and M. Villiers
was much too smart for that. The terms provided must have elated the provincial
colonel, and he sent Van Braam back to the French requesting that the conditions
of surrender be written. It took a great deal of time for this to transpire
in the rain, and when the Dutchman came back to the fort he read aloud
to the officers the smeared, somewhat indiscernible document25.
Captain Van Braam's reading of the surrender document
has come under some scrutiny and appears as a blot on his reputation. When
he came to the sentence, in the opening paragraph of the document, which
referenced the demise of the unfortunate Jumonville party, the word Villiers
used was assassin. However, either through haste, a singular lack
of knowledge of the written word, or guile, Van Braam mistranslated, using
a less offensive etymon26.
His reading of the remaining conditions was flawless,
though there was some question concerning the final point when the French
required that "they...must give their word of honor that they will not
work on any establishment either in the surrounding country or beyond the
mountains during one year beginning from this day." This final condition
and the situation regarding Van Braam's mistranslation would cause Col.
Washington no little embarrassment in the near future27.
Villiers provided munificent terms; the English would
surrender all but one cannon and be allowed to leave the fort with their
colors uncased and their drums beating. Washington, however, balked at
the requirement of delivering up his munitions of war; without ball and
powder they would be easy prey for the Indians. Van Braam went slogging
across the field to see the French commander, who quickly deleted the offending
term, thus permitting the English to leave armed.
Villiers did require that two hostages be turned over
to him until such time as the English released the prisoners taken at Jumonville's
Glen. Since Captain Van Braam was without familial obligations and spoke
some French, he and Captain Stobo, who was also unmarried, were chosen
(volunteered?). They gathered up some personal belongings and walked together
across the muddy field to their captors.
As the sun rose the next morning, July 4, 1754, the Virginia
Regiment and Independent Company were engaged in the morbid duty of burying
the dead; thirty souls entrusted to their Savior, properly prayed over,
with their courage recounted ever so briefly. Baggage was quickly packed,
and a heap piled with the debris of battle. They took what care they could
of their seventy wounded, preparing them for the journey. The Indians broke
into the cabin at the fort, plundered a large medicine chest, and then
demanded their right to pillage and captives. Villiers refused, according
to the terms of capitulation, and released a number of Virginians the Indians
had taken.
The sun was well up by the time the remnant of the Virginia
Regiment and the Independent Company marched out of the Great Meadows.
They made three miles the first day, pestered and pressed hard by the Indians.
The next day they left the seriously wounded under guard, sent two men
ahead to bring back wagons for them, then continued to Wills Creek.
Captain Villiers ordered Fort Necessity burnt, the guns
spiked, and everything that couldn't be carried destroyed. He then ordered
his command back to Fort Duquesne. The French stopped at Gist's Station,
destroyed the entrenchments, and burned the buildings; then they ministered
in the same manner to the Ohio Company's cabin at Redstone Station. They
arrived victorious at Fort Duquesne on July 7th. In the engagement they
lost three killed and 17 wounded.
Washington's defeat at the Great Meadows would have profound
repercussions in the colonies. No English establishment now existed west
of the Alleghenies; the French had unfettered control of the Ohio and Mississippi
Rivers from Canada to Louisiana; and most importantly, the Ohio Nations
- the Delaware, Shawnee, Miami, Wyandot, and even some Mingo - were eventually
to understand that the covenant chain with the English was nearly broken.
For the time being they adhered to the dictums of the Six Nations at Onondaga
and remained neutral, though the French had already begun to cajole them
with black wampum.
Tanaghrisson and Scarouady, the Mingo headmen at Loggs
Town, traveled to George Croghan's station at Aughwick, and there they
made their town. In September, 1754, three months after the unpleasantness
at the Great Meadows King Beaver27
and other distinguished Ohio country headmen came to seek the Tanaghrisson's
counsel. "We have hitherto," King Beaver said, "followed your directions
and lived very easy under your Protection, and no high Wind did blow to
make Us uneasy; but now Things seem to take another turn, and a high Wind
is rising...(28)."
Works Cited
Alberts, Robert C., A Charming Field for an Encounter,
National Parks Service, 1975.
Downes, Randolph, Council Fires on the Upper Ohio,
Univ. of Pittsburgh Press, reprint 1989.
Eckert, Allan, Wilderness Empire, Little, Brown
and Co. 1969.
Hanna, Charles, The Wilderness Trail, Vol. 1,
Wennawoods Publishing, reprint 1995.
Jennings, Francis, Empire of Fortune, W.W. Norton,
1988.
McConnel, Michael N., A Country Between, Univ.
of Nebraska Press, 1992.
Sipe, Hale, The Indian Wars of Pennsylvania, Wennawoods
Publishing, reprint 1995.
Tanner, Helen, Atlas of the Great Lakes Indian History,
Univ.
of Oklahoma Press, 1987.
Thwaites, R. G., Early Western Journals, Wennawoods
Publishing, reprint 1998.
Trudel, Marcel, The Jumonville Affair, (pamphlet)
Eastern National Parks and Monument Association, (Article first appeared
in Pennsylvania History, Vol. XXI, No. 4, 1954.
Washington, George, Writings, Library of America,
reprint 1997.
Notes
1 Parkman, Francis, Montcalm
and Wolfe, Library of America, reprint 1983, pp. 941-2.
Downes, Randolph, Council Fires on the Upper
Ohio, Univ. of Pittsburgh, reprint 1983. pp. 63-5.
Sipe, Hale, The Indian Wars of Pennsylvania,
Wennawoods Publishing, reprint 1995, p. 153. Sipe gives the number of troops
as 70.
2Sipe, op. cit.
p. 153; The author declares, "This was the first act of the war..."
3Parkman, op. cit.
pp. 941-942.
Downes, op. cit. pp. 63-65.
4Alberts, Robert C., A
Charming Field for an Encounter, National Parks Service, 1975, pp.
34-37.
5McConnel, Michael, N.,
A Country Between, Univ. of Nebraska, 1992, p. 52.
6Downes, op. cit.
pp. 67-68.
Tanaghrisson and Scarouady shared headmen duties at Loggs
Town, a village located a few miles above Fort Duquesne on the Ohio River.
The year before Tanaghrisson accompanied Mr. Washington on his journey
to Venango to warn the French away, and a bond was established between
these men.
7Trent's Station
at Redstone was 37 miles southeast of Fort Duquesne on the Monongahela
River.
8Alberts, op. cit.
pp. 15-16.
Sipe, op. cit. p. 156. In a letter to Lt.
Gov. Dinwiddie Washington presciently described the Great Meadow as a "...charming
field for and encounter."
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