A Woman of Courage on the West Virginia Frontier (22 page)

BOOK: A Woman of Courage on the West Virginia Frontier
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In this painting, William Crawford burns at the stake as Simon Girty (pictured pointing at Crawford while on a white horse) looks on.
Ohio Historical Society
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Girty leapt to Crawford’s defense, begging for mercy and even offering his horse and other goods in exchange for Crawford’s release to British custody. In fact, Girty argued Crawford’s case so passionately that Captain Pipe finally told him that unless Girty was prepared to take Crawford’s place at the stake, the Delaware chiefs would not hear another word from him. With that, Crawford’s fate was sealed, and he would endure over three hours of cruel torture before the flames finally killed him. Simon Girty could do nothing but stand by and watch, and Elizabeth Turner said she saw tears on his cheek as Crawford was brutally executed.
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Nevertheless, despite the fact that Phebe almost certainly had heard many horrible tales about Girty, including his supposed complicity in Crawford’s death, she still decided he was her best hope to get home at long last. As it turns out, despite all the grisly legends that painted Girty as cruel and heartless, she could not have asked a more able man for help.

Chapter 6

Homeward Bound

A P
LEA AND A
R
ANSOM

The morning after she heard that Simon Girty was in the village, Phebe kept a close watch for any sign of the man known to her only as a renegade traitor. One can imagine the anxiety she must have felt. This might be her one chance to get home, and if she missed him, if someone interfered with her efforts to speak to him or, more likely, if he was the cruel, heartless man many believed him to be and refused her pleas, all might be lost. Although white visitors were not in the village every day, it is likely that traders, missionaries, or Indian agents were occasional, if not regular, visitors to the village. Therefore, merely looking for a white man might not be enough to help her recognize her potential savior when he arrived. Nevertheless, because of Girty’s fame and legendary status, descriptions of him and his distinctive appearance were common knowledge among frontier settlers. He was said to wear Indian-style deer-hide clothes and carry a silver-mounted pistol and a short dirk, which was a Scottish dagger. However, the most distinguishing characteristic of Girty’s appearance, and the one most often reported in eyewitness accounts of him, was his red bandana. Girty habitually wore this bandana wrapped around his head to hide the scar that ran from his forehead to his left ear, a disfigurement resulting from a saber blow delivered during a fight with the famous Mohawk chief, Joseph Brant.
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After a while, Phebe saw Girty approach nearby on horseback, and she made a mad dash toward him. As she reached the side of his horse, she called out to him, but he took no notice. Finally, summoning a courage born of desperation, Phebe grabbed hold of his stirrup, which brought Girty to a halt. He looked down and saw a white woman with red hair dressed in Wyandot attire looking up at him imploringly. Phebe quickly told her story, stated her case and begged him to intercede with Darby and the village chiefs on her behalf.

Girty’s initial response to her pleas was jocular and even somewhat mocking. Looking at her, knowing the Wyandot had almost certainly adopted her and being so intimately familiar with their way of life, he told her that she did not seem the worse for her life among them and that she was likely “as well here as back in her own country.”
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His latter comment likely reflects what Girty knew firsthand about how former captives, especially women, were often treated by other whites upon their return from a lengthy captivity with the Indians. He knew some whites would treat Phebe with suspicion. Worse, she would likely be the target of the salacious speculation of others, based upon the mere fact that a young white woman had lived for three years in Wyandot longhouses where, in their minds, she was almost surely subjected to the unrestrained sexual urges of “savage” male warriors.

Girty then added that, even if he were disposed to assist her, his saddlebags were simply too small to conceal her. At this last reproach, Phebe fell to her knees beside his horse and repeated her plea for his assistance. Girty could now see she was utterly sincere, and his attitude softened. Earlier historians describe Girty’s change of heart as unusual, with one saying, “He whose heart had long been steeled against every kindly feeling, every sympathetic impression was at length induced to perform an act of generous, disinterested benevolence.”
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In fact, however, this was an act of compassion Girty had often undertaken, and he finally agreed to help Phebe obtain her release from the Wyandot. Based on the various histories of her captivity, the exact sequence of events that followed is somewhat unclear. Nevertheless, Girty most likely spoke to Darby first and requested that the old chief bring Phebe to the upcoming conference on the Maumee.

The purpose of that October 1788 meeting was for the assembled tribes to reach consensus on whether they would respond to an invitation from the American governor of the newly named Northwest Territories, Arthur St. Clair, and his chief agent, Richard Butler, to conduct negotiations at Fort Harmer for yet another treaty with the American government. The Indians wanted this new treaty to confirm for all time that the Ohio River was to be the perpetual boundary between American settlers and the Indian nations, but St. Clair and Butler had other objectives.

Major General Arthur St. Clair, American governor of the new Northwest Territory. Facsimile of a pencil drawing from life by Colonel J. Trumbull.
Courtesy Butler-Gunsaulus Collection, Box 6 Folder 62, Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library
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When the Maumee conference began, Girty chose to play an effective but quiet role, concentrating on activities and discussions outside the council house with the many Indian leaders who knew and trusted him. However, those chiefs who pressed for peace with the Americans no matter the price did not trust Girty. They saw him simply as Alexander McKee’s mouthpiece, and they believed McKee was firmly aligned with Joseph Brant and the Mohawks, who argued for war. The Indians finally resolved to go to Fort Harmer, but as the chiefs traveled to the fort, word came from St. Clair that the American position would be that previous treaties remained in force, all of which served to blur the Ohio River boundary. Therefore, the sole American objective of the Fort Harmer meeting would be to achieve a treaty that required even more concessions from the woodland Indians. Upon hearing this, Joseph Brant and his Mohawks, as well as the Delaware, Shawnee, Miami and Kickapoo nations, turned back, refusing to be parties to such an agreement.
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During the course of the Maumee conference, however, Girty made time to bring Phebe’s case before McKee. As Girty told Phebe’s story to McKee, the British agent realized that she was the wife of a man he knew. As a young man, McKee had done his own share of trading up the Monongahela, visiting many of the settlements along the river, and as a result, he was actually acquainted with Thomas and Edward Cunningham. When he realized this was Thomas’s wife, he quickly agreed to provide whatever goods were required to secure her release.
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Girty then met with Darby and the chiefs from the Wyandot village to negotiate her emancipation into British hands. At first, they protested and were very reluctant to let her go. After all, she was now a valued member of their community and someone seen as an integral part of the fabric of its society. Further, the village would likely view losing Phebe as diminishing the strength and vitality of her Wyandot family’s longhouse, something which could not be allowed to happen. As a result, Girty had to keep increasing his offer for her ransom, and apparently, the negotiations became quite heated. Finally, one of the chiefs, most likely Darby, seized Phebe by the shoulders and shoved her roughly toward Girty. “Take her,” he shouted, and then, referring to the lost warrior she had replaced, “We now have nothing for our flesh and blood.”
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K
ENTUCKY
,
THE
W
ILDERNESS
R
OAD AND
H
OME

Once the Wyandot released her to the British, McKee and Girty told Phebe she was free to return home. However, she had no apparent way to do so. Luckily, there were two men at the conference who had traveled to the Maumee from Kentucky in search of information on family members taken captive by the Indians and were about to return home. Their names were Denton and Long, and McKee and Girty introduced Phebe to them. When she told her story to her granddaughter, Phebe did not say where precisely Denton and Long had traveled from except to say that it was in the “interior” of Kentucky. However, historical records indicate that hundreds of settlers were taken captive in a 1780 attack on Ruddell’s Station, near what is now Cynthiana, Kentucky, and the prisoners listed include people named both Denton and Long. Consequently, the Ruddell’s Station raid was probably the cause of their journey to Ohio, and since the fort there was destroyed in the British attack, they most likely were traveling back to Boonesborough, the bustling center of the Kentucky settler community.
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Denton and Long offered Phebe the use of a horse as well as their protection and companionship during the trip to Kentucky. From there, they suggested she might be able to join a caravan headed east, back to the settlements on the Holston River in what is now southwestern Virginia. Having no other options, Phebe readily agreed, and the trio set out for Kentucky. Once they arrived in Boonesborough several weeks later, Phebe immediately sought out information regarding any groups heading east across the mountains to Virginia. These journeys were quite dangerous, and people seldom made the trip except in large, defensible groups and only during certain periods of the year when Indian ambushes were least likely to occur. She learned that one party was about to make the trip, and she traveled to their assembly point, where she arranged to accompany them. However, just as they were about to leave, news arrived that another caravan, one larger than theirs, had been wiped out by an Indian attack. The group cancelled their plans, but Phebe simply refused to give up. She had made it this far, and nothing was going to deter her from getting home as soon as possible. Without any hesitation, she began searching for another caravan, now more determined than ever to find her way one step closer to home.
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After a few days passed, she found another party about to make the journey that was either braver than the others or perhaps more foolhardy. In any case, they agreed to have Phebe make the trip in their company and even provided her with a horse. The mount was apparently the property of a man from the Holston River settlements who had come to Kentucky to hunt buffalo, lost his horse and had to return home before recovering the animal. Luckily for Phebe, she would now be able to return it to him and not have to walk over the mountains to Virginia.

The journey down the famous Wilderness Road to Virginia was not an easy one. From the area around Boonesborough, the road went south to Big Hill and on to Hazel Patch, wandering from there through the rugged country of eastern Kentucky, crossing the Laurel and Rockcastle Rivers. Fifteen miles from the Cumberland Gap, it cut through the Cumberland River gorge in Pine Mountain and then worked its way along the famous passage, which was a deep cut in the high walls of the Cumberland Mountains that separate Virginia and east Tennessee from Kentucky. Once past the gap, the road wound one hundred miles through the hills and valleys drained by the Clinch and Powell Rivers until it passed through Moccasin Gap in Clinch Mountain and arrived in the Holston Valley.
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Although the path was wide enough for a wagon to pass, it was still narrow, winding and rugged in most places, and the dangers of traveling it included not only Indian raiders but also a growing number of robbers and highwaymen brave enough to risk the Indians while stealing from settlers and traders alike. Moreover, it was now approaching the onset of winter, and the higher passes had already experienced their first snowfalls.

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