The War Chief of the Ottawas : A chronicle of the Pontiac war
127 pages
English

The War Chief of the Ottawas : A chronicle of the Pontiac war

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127 pages
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Project Gutenberg's The War Chief of the Ottawas, by Thomas Guthrie MarquisThis eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it,give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online atwww.gutenberg.netTitle: The War Chief of the Ottawas A Chronicle of the Pontiac War: Volume 15 (of 32) in the series Chronicles ofCanadaAuthor: Thomas Guthrie MarquisRelease Date: April 2, 2005 [EBook #15522]Language: English*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WAR CHIEF OF THE OTTAWAS ***This etext was produced by Gardner Buchanan.CHRONICLES OF CANADAEdited by George M. Wrong and H. H. LangtonIn thirty-two volumesVolume 15THE WAR CHIEF OF THE OTTAWASA Chronicle of the Pontiac WarBy THOMAS GUTHRIE MARQUISTORONTO, 1915CONTENTSI. THE TIMES AND THE MEN II. PONTIAC AND THE TRIBES OF THE HINTERLAND III. THE GATHERING STORM IV. THE SIEGE OF DETROIT V. THE FALL OFTHE LESSER FORTS VI. THE RELIEF OF FORT PITT VII. DETROIT ONCE MORE VIII. WINDING UP THE INDIAN WAR BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTECHAPTER ITHE TIMES AND THE MENThere was rejoicing throughout the Thirteen Colonies, in the month of September 1760, when news arrived of thecapitulation of Montreal. Bonfires flamed forth and prayers were offered up in the churches and meeting-houses ingratitude for deliverance from a foe that for over a hundred years had harried and had caused the Indians to harry ...

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Publié le 08 décembre 2010
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Project Gutenberg's The War Chief of the Ottawas,by Thomas Guthrie MarquisThis eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere atno cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever.You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under theterms of the Project Gutenberg License includedwith this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.netTitle: The War Chief of the Ottawas A Chronicle ofthe Pontiac War: Volume 15 (of 32) in the seriesChronicles of CanadaAuthor: Thomas Guthrie MarquisRelease Date: April 2, 2005 [EBook #15522]Language: English*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERGEBOOK THE WAR CHIEF OF THE OTTAWAS ***This etext was produced by Gardner Buchanan.CHRONICLES OF CANADAEdited by George M. Wrong and H. H. Langton
In thirty-two volumesVolume 15THE WAR CHIEF OF THE OTTAWASA Chronicle of the Pontiac WarBy THOMAS GUTHRIE MARQUISTORONTO, 1915CONTENTSI. THE TIMES AND THE MEN II. PONTIAC ANDTHE TRIBES OF THE HINTERLAND III. THEGATHERING STORM IV. THE SIEGE OFDETROIT V. THE FALL OF THE LESSER FORTSVI. THE RELIEF OF FORT PITT VII. DETROITONCE MORE VIII. WINDING UP THE INDIANWAR BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
CHAPTER ITHE TIMES AND THE MENThere was rejoicing throughout the ThirteenColonies, in the month of September 1760, whennews arrived of the capitulation of Montreal.Bonfires flamed forth and prayers were offered upin the churches and meeting-houses in gratitudefor deliverance from a foe that for over a hundredyears had harried and had caused the Indians toharry the frontier settlements. The French armieswere defeated by land; the French fleets werebeaten at sea. The troops of the enemy had beenremoved from North America, and so powerlesswas France on the ocean that, even if successshould crown her arms on the European continent,where the Seven Years' War was still raging, itwould be impossible for her to transport a newforce to America. The principal French forts inAmerica were occupied by British troops.Louisbourg had been razed to the ground; theBritish flag waved over Quebec, Montreal, andNiagara, and was soon to be raised on all thelesser forts in the territory known as Canada. TheMississippi valley from the Illinois river southwardalone remained to France. Vincennes on theWabash and Fort Chartres on the Mississippi werethe only posts in the hinterland occupied by Frenchtroops. These posts were under the government ofLouisiana; but even these the American colonies
were prepared to claim, basing the right on their'sea to sea' charters.The British in America had found the strip of landbetween the Alleghanies and the Atlantic far toonarrow for a rapidly increasing population, but theiradvance westward had been barred by the French.Now, praise the Lord, the French were out of theway, and American traders and settlers couldexploit the profitable fur-fields and the richagricultural lands of the region beyond themountains. True, the Indians were there, but thesewere not regarded as formidable foes. There wasno longer any occasion to consider the Indians—sothought the colonists and the British officers inAmerica. The red men had been a force to bereckoned with only because the French hadsupplied them with the sinews of war, but theymight now be treated like other denizens of theforest—the bears, the wolves, and the wild cats.For this mistaken policy the British colonies were topay a heavy price.The French and the Indians, save for oneexception, had been on terms of amity from thebeginning. The reason for this was that the Frenchhad treated the Indians with studied kindness. Theone exception was the Iroquois League or SixNations. Champlain, in the first years of hisresidence at Quebec, had joined the Algonquinsand Hurons in an attack on them, which they neverforgot; and, in spite of the noble efforts of Frenchmissionaries and a lavish bestowal of gifts, theIroquois thorn remained in the side of New France.
But with the other Indian tribes the French workedhand in hand, with the Cross and the priest ever inadvance of the trader's pack. French missionarieswere the first white men to settle in the populousHuron country near Lake Simcoe. A missionarywas the first European to catch a glimpse ofGeorgian Bay, and a missionary was probably thefirst of the French race to launch his canoe on thelordly Mississippi. As a father the priest watchedover his wilderness flock; while the French tradersfraternized with the red men, and often mated withdusky beauties. Many French traders, according toSir William Johnson—a good authority, of whomwe shall learn more later-were 'gentlemen inmanners, character, and dress,' and they treatedthe natives kindly. At the great centres of trade—Montreal, Three Rivers, and Quebec—the chiefswere royally received with roll of drum and salute ofguns. The governor himself —the 'Big Mountain,'as they called him—would extend to them awelcoming hand and take part in their feastingsand councils. At the inland trading-posts theIndians were given goods for their winter hunts oncredit and loaded with presents by the officials. Tosuch an extent did the custom of giving presentsprevail that it became a heavy tax on the treasuryof France, insignificant, however, compared withthe alternative of keeping in the hinterland anarmed force. The Indians, too, had fought side byside with the French in many notableengagements. They had aided Montcalm, and hadassisted in such triumphs as the defeat ofBraddock. They were not only friends of theFrench; they were sword companions.
The British colonists could not, of course, entertainfriendly feelings towards the tribes which sided withtheir enemies and often devastated their homesand murdered their people. But it must be admittedthat, from the first, the British in America were farbehind the French in christianlike conduct towardsthe native races. The colonial traders generallydespised the Indians and treated them as ofcommercial value only, as gatherers of pelts, andheld their lives in little more esteem than the livesof the animals that yielded the pelts. Themissionary zeal of New England, compared withthat of New France, was exceedingly mild. Rumwas a leading article of trade. The Indians wereoften cheated out of their furs; in some instancesthey were slain and their packs stolen. Sir WilliamJohnson described the British traders as 'men ofno zeal or capacity: men who even sacrifice thecredit of the nation to the basest purposes.' Therewere exceptions, of course, in such men asAlexander Henry and Johnson himself, who,besides being a wise official and a successfulmilitary commander, was one of the leadingtraders.No sooner was New France vanquished than theBritish began building new forts and blockhouses inthe hinterland. [Footnote: By the hinterland ismeant, of course, the regions beyond the zone ofsettlement; roughly, all west of Montreal and theAlleghanies.] Since the French were no longer tobe reckoned with, why were these forts needed?Evidently, the Indians thought, to keep the red
children in subjection and to deprive them of theirhunting-grounds! The gardens they saw incultivation about the forts were to them theforerunners of general settlement. The French hadbeen content with trade; the British appropriatedlands for farming, and the coming of the whitesettler meant the disappearance of game. Indianchiefs saw in these forts and cultivated strips ofland a desire to exterminate the red man and stealhis territory; and they were not far wrong.Outside influences, as well, were at work amongthe Indians. Soon after the French armiesdeparted, the inhabitants along the St Lawrencehad learned to welcome the change ofgovernment. They were left to cultivate their farmsin peace. The tax-gatherer was no longersqueezing from them their last sou as in the daysof Bigot; nor were their sons, whose labour wasneeded on the farms and in the workshops, forcedto take up arms. They had peace and plenty, andwere content. But in the hinterland it was different.At Detroit, Michilimackinac, and other forts wereFrench trading communities, which, being far fromthe seat of war and government, were slow torealize that they were no longer subjects of theFrench king. Hostile themselves, these Frenchtraders naturally encouraged the Indians in anattitude of hostility to the incoming British. Theysaid that a French fleet and army were on theirway to Canada to recover the territory. Even ifCanada were lost, Louisiana was still French, and,if only the British could be kept out of the west, thetrade that had hitherto gone down the St Lawrence
might now go by way of the Mississippi.The commander-in-chief of the British forces inNorth America, Sir Jeffery Amherst, despised thered men. They were 'only fit to live with theinhabitants of the woods, being more nearly alliedto the Brute than to the Human creation.' OtherBritish officers had much the same attitude.Colonel Henry Bouquet, on a suggestion made tohim by Amherst that blankets infected with small-pox might be distributed to good purpose amongthe savages, not only fell in with Amherst's views,but further proposed that dogs should be used tohunt them down. 'You will do well,' Amherst wroteto Bouquet, 'to try to inoculate the Indians bymeans of Blankets as well as to try every othermethod that can serve to extirpate this ExecrableRace. I should be very glad if your scheme forhunting them down by dogs could take effect, butEngland is at too great a Distance to think of thatat present.' And Major Henry Gladwyn, who, as weshall see, gallantly held Detroit through months oftrying siege, thought that the unrestricted sale ofrum among the Indians would extirpate them morequickly than powder and shot, and at less cost.There was, however, one British officer, at least, inAmerica who did not hold such views towards thenatives of the soil. Sir William Johnson, through hissympathy and generosity, had won the friendshipof the Six Nations, the most courageous and themost cruel of the Indian tribes. [Footnote: For moreabout Sir William Johnson see The War Chief ofthe Six Nations in this Series.] It has been said by
a recent writer that Johnson was 'as much Indianas white man.' [Footnote: Lucas's A History ofCanada, 1763-1812, p. 58.] Nothing could be moremisleading. Johnson was simply an enlightenedIrishman of broad sympathies who could makehimself at home in palace, hut, or wigwam. He wasan astute diplomatist, capable of winning his pointin controversy with the most learned andexperienced legislators of the colonies, asuccessful military leader, a most successfultrader; and there was probably no moreprogressive and scientific farmer in America. Hehad a cultivated mind; the orders he sent toLondon for books show that he was something of ascholar and in his leisure moments given to seriousreading. His advice to the lords of trade regardingcolonial affairs was that of a statesman. Hefraternized with the Dutch settlers of hisneighbourhood and with the Indians wherever hefound them. At Detroit, in 1761, he entered into thespirit of the French settlers and joined withenthusiasm in their feasts and dances. He was oneof those rare characters who can be all things to allmen and yet keep an untarnished name. TheIndians loved him as a firm friend, and his homewas to them Liberty Hall. But for this man theIndian rising against British rule would haveattained greater proportions. At the critical periodhe succeeded in keeping the Six Nations loyal,save for the Senecas. This was most important; forhad the Six Nations joined in the war against theBritish, it is probable that not a fort west ofMontreal would have remained standing. The lineof communication between Albany and Oswego
would have been cut, provisions and troops couldnot have been forwarded, and, inevitably, bothNiagara and Detroit would have fallen.But as it was, the Pontiac War proved seriousenough. It extended as far north as Sault SteMarie and as far south as the borders of SouthCarolina and Georgia. Detroit was cut off formonths; the Indians drove the British from all otherpoints on the Great Lakes west of Lake Ontario;for a time they triumphantly pushed their war-parties, plundering and burning and murdering,from the Mississippi to the frontiers of New York.During the year 1763 more British lives were lost inAmerica than in the memorable year of 1759, theyear of the siege of Quebec and the world-famousbattle of the Plains of Abraham.
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