A Narrative of the Late Massacres
A Narrative of the Late Massacres, in Lancaster County, of a
Number of Indians, Friends of this Province, By Persons
Unknown. With some Observations on the same. Printed in
the Year M,DCC,LXIV. (Yale University Library)
A Narrative, &c.
[January 30?, 1764]
These Indians were the Remains of a Tribe of the Six Nations,
settled at Conestogoe, and thence called Conestogoe Indians. On the
first Arrival of the English in Pennsylvania, Messengers from this
Tribe came to welcome them, with Presents of Venison, Corn and
Skins; and the whole Tribe entered into a Treaty of Friendship with
the first Proprietor, William Penn, which
was to last “as long as the Sun should shine, or the Waters run in
the Rivers.”
This Treaty has been since frequently renewed,
and the Chain brightened, as they express it, from
time to time. It has never been violated, on their Part or ours,
till now. As their Lands by Degrees were mostly purchased, and the
Settlements of the White People began to surround them, the
Proprietor assigned them Lands on the Manor of Conestogoe, which
they might not part with; there they have lived many Years in
Friendship with their White Neighbours, who loved them for their
peaceable inoffensive Behaviour.
It has always been observed, that Indians,
settled in the Neighbourhood of White People, do not increase, but
diminish continually. This Tribe accordingly went on diminishing,
till there remained in their Town on the Manor, but 20 Persons,
viz. 7 Men, 5 Women, and 8 Children, Boys and Girls.
Of these, Shehaes was a very old Man, having
assisted at the second Treaty held with them, by Mr. Penn, in 1701, and ever since continued a faithful and
affectionate Friend to the English; he is said to have been an
exceeding good Man, considering his Education, being naturally of a
most kind benevolent Temper.
Peggy was Shehaes’s Daughter; she worked for
her aged Father, continuing to live with him, though married, and
attended him with filial Duty and Tenderness.
John was another good old Man; his Son Harry
helped to support him.
George and Will Soc were two Brothers, both
young Men.
John Smith, a valuable young Man, of the Cayuga
Nation, who became acquainted with Peggy, Shehaes’s Daughter, some
few Years since, married her, and settled in that Family. They had
one Child, about three Years old.
Betty, a harmless old Woman; and her Son Peter,
a likely young Lad.
Sally, whose Indian Name was Wyanjoy, a Woman
much esteemed by all that knew her, for her prudent and good
Behaviour in some very trying Situations of Life. She was a truly
good and an amiable Woman, had no Children of her own, but a
distant Relation dying, she had taken a Child of that Relation’s,
to bring up as her own, and performed towards it all the Duties of
an affectionate Parent.
The Reader will observe, that many of their
Names are English. It is common with the Indians that have an
Affection for the English, to give themselves, and their Children,
the Names of such English Persons as they particularly esteem.
This little Society continued the Custom they
had begun, when more numerous, of addressing every new Governor,
and every Descendant of the first Proprietor, welcoming him to the
Province, assuring him of their Fidelity, and praying a Continuance
of that Favour and Protection they had hitherto experienced. They
had accordingly sent up an Address of this Kind to our present
Governor, on his Arrival; but the same was scarce delivered, when
the unfortunate Catastrophe happened, which we are about to
relate.
On Wednesday, the 14th of December, 1763,
Fifty-seven Men, from some of our Frontier Townships, who had
projected the Destruction of this little Common-wealth, came, all
well-mounted, and armed with Firelocks, Hangers and Hatchets,
having travelled through the Country in the Night, to Conestogoe
Manor. There they surrounded the small Village of Indian Huts, and
just at Break of Day broke into them all at once. Only three Men,
two Women, and a young Boy, were found at home, the rest being out
among the neighbouring White People, some to sell the Baskets,
Brooms and Bowls they manufactured, and others on other Occasions.
These poor defenceless Creatures were immediately fired upon,
stabbed and hatcheted to Death! The good Shehaes, among the rest,
cut to Pieces in his Bed. All of them were scalped, and otherwise
horribly mangled. Then their Huts were set on Fire, and most of
them burnt down. When the Troop, pleased with their own Conduct and
Bravery, but enraged that any of the poor Indians had escaped the
Massacre, rode off, and in small Parties, by different Roads, went
home.
The universal Concern of the neighbouring White
People on hearing of this Event, and the Lamentations of the
younger Indians, when they returned and saw the Desolation, and the
butchered half-burnt Bodies of their murdered Parents, and other
Relations, cannot well be expressed.
The Magistrates of Lancaster sent out to
collect the remaining Indians, brought them into the Town for their
better Security against any further Attempt, and it is said
condoled with them on the Misfortune that had happened, took them
by the Hand, comforted and promised them Protection. They
were all put into the Work-house, a strong Building, as the Place
of greatest Safety.
When the shocking News arrived in Town, a
Proclamation was issued by the Governor, in the following Terms,
viz.
“Whereas I have
received Information, That on Wednesday, the Fourteenth Day of this
Month, a Number of People, armed, and mounted on Horseback,
unlawfully assembled together, and went to the Indian Town in the
Conestogoe Manor, in Lancaster County, and without the least Reason
or Provocation, in cool Blood, barbarously killed six of the
Indians settled there, and burnt and destroyed all their Houses and
Effects: And whereas so cruel and inhuman an Act, committed in the
Heart of this Province on the said Indians, who have lived
peaceably and inoffensively among us, during all our late Troubles,
and for many Years before, and were justly considered as under the
Protection of this Government and its Laws, calls loudly for the
vigorous Exertion of the civil Authority, to detect the Offenders,
and bring them to condign Punishment; I have therefore, by and with
the Advice and Consent of the Council, thought fit to issue this
Proclamation, and do hereby strictly charge and enjoin all Judges,
Justices, Sheriffs, Constables, Officers Civil and Military, and
all other His Majesty’s liege Subjects within this Province, to
make diligent Search and Enquiry after the Authors and Perpetrators
of the said Crime, their Abettors and Accomplices, and to use all
possible Means to apprehend and secure them in some of the publick
Goals of this Province, that they may be brought to their Trials,
and be proceeded against according to Law.
“And whereas a Number of other Indians, who
lately lived on or near the Frontiers of this Province, being
willing and desirous to preserve and continue the ancient
Friendship which heretofore subsisted between them and the good
People of this Province, have, at their own earnest Request, been
removed from their Habitations, and brought into the County of
Philadelphia, and seated, for the present, for their better
Security, on the Province-Island, and in other Places in the
Neighbourhood of the City of Philadelphia, where Provision is made
for them at the public Expence; I do therefore hereby strictly
forbid all Persons whatsoever, to molest or injure any of the said
Indians, as they will answer the contrary at their Peril.
“Given under my
Hand, and the Great Seal of the said Province, at
Philadelphia, the Twenty-second Day of December, Anno Domini
One Thousand Seven Hundred and Sixty-three, and in the
Fourth Year of His Majesty’s Reign.
“By His Honour’s Command,
Joseph Shippen, jun.
Secretary.
“God Save the King.”
Notwithstanding this Proclamation, those cruel
Men again assembled themselves, and hearing that the remaining
fourteen Indians were in the Work-house at Lancaster, they suddenly
appeared in that Town, on the 27th of December. Fifty of them,
armed as before, dismounting, went directly to the Work-house, and
by Violence broke open the Door, and entered with the utmost Fury
in their Countenances. When the poor Wretches saw they had no
Protection nigh, nor could possibly escape, and being without
the least Weapon for Defence, they divided into their little
Families, the Children clinging to the Parents; they fell on their
Knees, protested their Innocence, declared their Love to the
English, and that, in their whole Lives, they had never done them
Injury; and in this Posture they all received the Hatchet! Men,
Women and little Children—were every one inhumanly murdered!—in
cold Blood!
The barbarous Men who committed the atrocious
Fact, in Defiance of Government, of all Laws human and divine, and
to the eternal Disgrace of their Country and Colour, then mounted
their Horses, huzza’d in Triumph, as if they had gained a Victory,
and rode off—unmolested!
The Bodies of the Murdered were then brought
out and exposed in the Street, till a Hole could be made in the
Earth, to receive and cover them.
But the Wickedness cannot be covered, the Guilt
will lie on the whole Land, till Justice is done on the Murderers.
The Blood of the Innocent will cry to Heaven for
Vengeance.
It is said that Shehaes, being before told,
that it was to be feared some English might come from the Frontier
into the Country, and murder him and his People; he replied, “It is
impossible: There are Indians, indeed, in the Woods, who would kill
me and mine, if they could get at us, for my Friendship to the
English; but the English will wrap me in their Matchcoat, and
secure me from all Danger.” How unfortunately was he mistaken!
Another Proclamation has been issued, offering
a great Reward for apprehending the Murderers, in the following
Terms, viz.
“Whereas on the
Twenty-second Day of December last, I issued a Proclamation for the
apprehending and bringing to Justice, a Number of Persons, who, in
Violation of the Public Faith; and in Defiance of all Law, had
inhumanly killed six of the Indians, who had lived in Conestogoe
Manor, for the Course of many Years, peaceably and inoffensively,
under the Protection of this Government, on Lands assigned to them
for their Habitation; notwithstanding which, I have received
Information, that on the Twenty-seventh of the same Month, a large
Party of armed Men again assembled and met together in a riotous
and tumultuous Manner, in the County of Lancaster, and proceeded to
the Town of Lancaster, where they violently broke open the
Work-house, and butchered and put to Death fourteen of the said
Conestogoe Indians, Men, Women and Children, who had been taken
under the immediate Care and Protection of the Magistrates of the
said County, and lodged for their better Security in the said
Work-house, till they should be more effectually provided for by
Order of the Government. And whereas common Justice loudly demands,
and the Laws of the Land (upon the Preservation of which not only
the Liberty and Security of every Individual, but the Being of the
Government itself depend) require that the above Offenders should
be brought to condign Punishment; I have therefore, by and with the
Advice of the Council, published this Proclamation, and do hereby
strictly charge and command all Judges, Justices, Sheriffs,
Constables, Officers Civil and Military, and all other His
Majesty’s faithful and liege Subjects within this Province, to make
diligent Search and Enquiry after the Authors and Perpetrators of
the said last mentioned Offence, their Abettors and Accomplices,
and that they use all possible Means to apprehend and secure them
in some of the public Goals of this Province, to be dealt with
according to Law.
“And I do hereby further promise and engage,
that any Person or Persons, who shall apprehend and secure, or
cause to be apprehended and secured, any Three of the Ringleaders
of the said Party, and prosecute them to Conviction, shall have and
receive for each, the public Reward of Two Hundred Pounds; and any
Accomplice, not concerned in the immediate shedding the Blood of
the said Indians, who shall make Discovery of any or either of the
said Ringleaders, and apprehend and prosecute them to Conviction,
shall, over and above the said Reward, have all the Weight and
Influence of the Government, for obtaining His Majesty’s Pardon for
his Offence.
“Given under my
Hand, and the Great Seal of the said Province, at
Philadelphia, the Second Day of January, in the Fourth Year
of His Majesty’s Reign, and in the Year of our Lord One
Thousand Seven Hundred and Sixty-four.
“By His Honour’s Command,
Joseph Shippen, jun.
Secretary.
“God Save the King.”
These Proclamations have as yet produced no
Discovery; the Murderers having given out such Threatenings against
those that disapprove their Proceedings, that the whole County
seems to be in Terror, and no one durst speak what he knows; even
the Letters from thence are unsigned, in which any Dislike is
expressed of the Rioters.
There are some (I am ashamed to hear it) who
would extenuate the enormous Wickedness of these Actions, by
saying, “The Inhabitants of the Frontiers are exasperated with the
Murder of their Relations, by the Enemy Indians, in the present
War.” It is possible; but though this might justify their going out
into the Woods, to seek for those Enemies, and avenge upon them
those Murders; it can never justify their turning in to the Heart
of the Country, to murder their Friends.
If an Indian injures me, does it follow that I
may revenge that Injury on all Indians? It is well known that
Indians are of different Tribes, Nations and Languages, as well as
the White People. In Europe, if the French, who are White-People,
should injure the Dutch, are they to revenge it on the English,
because they too are White People? The only Crime of these poor
Wretches seems to have been, that they had a reddish brown Skin,
and black Hair; and some People of that Sort, it seems, had
murdered some of our Relations. If it be right to kill Men for such
a Reason, then, should any Man, with a freckled Face and red Hair,
kill a Wife or Child of mine, it would be right for me to revenge
it, by killing all the freckled red-haired Men, Women and Children,
I could afterwards any where meet with.
But it seems these People think they have a
better Justification; nothing less than the Word of God.
With the Scriptures in their Hands and Mouths, they can set at
nought that express Command, Thou shalt do no Murder; and
justify their Wickedness, by the Command given Joshua to destroy
the Heathen. Horrid Perversion of Scripture and of Religion! to
father the worst of Crimes on the God of Peace and Love! Even the
Jews, to whom that particular Commission was directed, spared the
Gibeonites, on Account of their Faith once given. The Faith of this
Government has been frequently given to those Indians; but that did
not avail them with People who despise Government.
We pretend to be Christians, and, from the
superior Light we enjoy, ought to exceed Heathens, Turks, Saracens,
Moors, Negroes, and Indians, in the Knowledge and Practice of what
is right. I will endeavour to show, by a few Examples from Books
and History, the Sense those People have had of such Actions.
Homer wrote his Poem,
called the Odyssey, some Hundred Years before the Birth of
Christ. He frequently speaks of what he calls not only the
Duties, but the sacred Rites of Hospitality, (exercised
towards Strangers, while in our House or Territory) as including,
besides all the common Circumstances of Entertainment, full Safety
and Protection of Person, from all Danger of Life, from all
Injuries, and even Insults. The Rites of Hospitality were called
sacred, because the Stranger, the Poor and the Weak, when
they applied for Protection and Relief, were, from the Religion of
those Times, supposed to be sent by the Deity to try the Goodness
of Men, and that he would avenge the Injuries they might receive,
where they ought to have been protected. These Sentiments therefore
influenced the Manners of all Ranks of People, even the meanest;
for we find that when Ulysses came, as a poor Stranger, to the Hut
of Eumaeus, the Swineherd, and his great Dogs ran out to tear the
ragged Man, Eumaeus drave them away with Stones; and
Unhappy Stranger! (thus the faithful Swain
Began, with Accent gracious and humane)
What Sorrow had been mine, if at my Gate
Thy rev’rend Age had met a shameful Fate?
------ But enter this my homely Roof, and see
Our Woods not void of Hospitality.
He said, and seconding the kind Request,
With friendly Step precedes the unknown Guest.
A shaggy Goat’s soft Hide beneath him spread,
And with fresh Rushes heap’d an ample Bed.
Joy touch’d the Hero’s tender Soul, to find
So just Reception from a Heart so kind:
And oh, ye Gods! with all your Blessings grace
(He thus broke forth) this Friend of human Race!
The Swain reply’d. It never was our guise
To slight the Poor, or aught humane despise.
For Jove unfolds the hospitable Door,
Tis Jove that sends the Stranger and the Poor.
These Heathen People thought, that after a
Breach of the Rites of Hospitality, a Curse from Heaven would
attend them in every thing they did, and even their honest Industry
in their Callings would fail of Success. Thus when Ulysses tells
Eumaeus, who doubted the Truth of what he related, If I deceive
you in this, I should deserve Death, and I consent that you
should put me to Death; Eumaeus rejects the Proposal as what
would be attended with both Infamy and Misfortune, saying
ironically,
Doubtless, oh Guest! great Laud and Praise were mine,
If, after social Rites and Gifts bestow’d,
I stain’d my Hospitable Hearth with Blood.
How would the Gods my righteous Toils succeed,
And bless the Hand that made a Stranger bleed?
No more.——
Even an open Enemy, in the Heat of Battle,
throwing down his Arms, submitting to his Foe, and asking Life and
Protection, was supposed to acquire an immediate Right to that
Protection. Thus one describes his being saved, when his Party was
defeated.
We turn’d to Flight; the gath’ring Vengeance spread
On all Parts round, and Heaps on Heaps lie dead.
—— The radiant Helmet from my Brows unlac’d,
And lo on Earth my Shield and Jav’lin cast,
I meet the Monarch with a Suppliant’s Face,
Approach his Chariat, and his Knees embrace.
He heard, he sav’d he plac’d me at his Side;
My State he pity’d, and my Tears he dry’d;
Restrain’d the Rage the vengeful Foe express’d,
And turn’d the deadly Weapons from my Breast.
Pious to guard the Hospitable Rite,
And fearing Jove, whom Mercy’s Works delight.
The Suitors of Penelope are by the same ancient
Poet described as a Sett of Lawless Men, who were regardless of
the sacred Rites of Hospitality. And therefore when the
Queen was informed they were slain, and that by Ulysses, she, not
believing that Ulysses was returned, says,
Ah no! —— some God the Suitors Deaths decreed,
Some God descends, and by his Hand they bleed:
Blind, to contemn the Stranger’s righteous Cause,
And violate all hospitable Laws!
—————— The Powers they defy’d;
But Heav’n is just, and by a God they dy’d.
Thus much for the Sentiments of the ancient
Heathens. As for the Turks, it is recorded in the Life of Mahomet,
the Founder of their Religion, That Khaled, one of his Captains,
having divided a Number of Prisoners between himself and those that
were with him, he commanded the Hands of his own Prisoners to be
tied behind them, and then, in a most cruel and brutal Manner, put
them to the Sword; but he could not prevail on his Men to massacre
their Captives, because in Fight they had laid down their
Arms, submitted, and demanded Protection. Mahomet, when the Account
was brought to him, applauded the Men for their Humanity; but said
to Khaled, with great Indignation, Oh Khaled, thou
Butcher, cease to molest me with thy Wickedness. If thou
possessedst a Heap of Gold as large as Mount Obod, and
shouldst expend it all in God’s Cause, thy Merit would not
efface the Guilt incurred by the Murder of the meanest of
those poor Captives.
Among the Arabs or Saracens, though it was
lawful to put to Death a Prisoner taken in Battle, if he had made
himself obnoxious by his former Wickedness, yet this could not be
done after he had once eaten Bread, or drank Water, while in their
Hands. Hence we read in the History of the Wars of the Holy Land,
that when the Franks had suffered a great Defeat from Saladin, and
among the Prisoners were the King of Jerusalem, and Arnold, a
famous Christian Captain, who had been very cruel to the Saracens;
these two being brought before the Soltan, he placed the King on
his right Hand, and Arnold on his left; and then presented the King
with a Cup of Water, who immediately drank to Arnold; but when
Arnold was about to receive the Cup, the Soltan interrupted,
saying, I will not suffer this wicked Man to drink, as that,
according to the laudable and generous Custom of the Arabs,
would secure him his Life.
That same laudable and generous Custom still
prevails among the Mahometans, appears from the Account but last
Year published of his Travels by Mr. Bell of Antermony, who
accompanied the Czar Peter the Great, in his Journey to Derbent
through Daggestan. “The Religion of the Daggestans, says he, is
generally Mahometan, some following the Sect of Osman, others that
of Haly. Their Language for the most Part is Turkish, or rather a
Dialect of the Arabic, though many of them speak also the Persian
Language. One Article I cannot omit concerning their Laws of
Hospitality, which is, if their greatest Enemy comes under their
Roof for Protection, the Landlord, of what Condition soever, is
obliged to keep him safe, from all Manner of Harm or Violence,
during his Abode with him, and even to conduct him safely through
his Territories to a Place of Security.”
From the Saracens this same Custom obtained
among the Moors of Africa; was by them brought into Spain, and
there long sacredly observed. The Spanish Historians record with
Applause one famous Instance of it. While the Moors governed there,
and the Spaniards were mixed with them, a Spanish Cavalier, in a
sudden Quarrel, slew a young Moorish Gentleman, and fled. His
Pursuers soon lost Sight of him, for he had, unperceived, thrown
himself over a Garden Wall. The Owner, a Moor, happening to be in
his Garden, was addressed by the Spaniard on his Knees, who
acquainted him with his Case, and implored Concealment. Eat
this, said the Moor, giving him Half a Peach; you now know
that you may confide in my Protection. He then locked
him up in his Garden Apartment, telling him, that as soon as it was
Night he would provide for his Escape to a Place of more Safety.
The Moor then went into his House, where he had scarce seated
himself, when a great Croud, with loud Lamentations, came to his
Gate, bringing the Corps of his Son, that had just been killed by a
Spaniard. When the first Shock of Surprize was a little over, he
learnt, from the Description given, that the fatal Deed was done by
the Person then in his Power. He mentioned this to no One; but as
soon as it was dark, retired to his Garden Apartment, as if to
grieve alone, giving Orders that none should follow him. There
accosting the Spaniard, he said, Christian, the Person you have
killed, is my Son: His Body is now in my House. You ought to
suffer; but you have eaten with me, and I have given you my
Faith, which must not be broken. Follow me. He then led the
astonished Spaniard to his Stables, mounted him on one of his
fleetest Horses, and said, Fly far while the Night can
cover you. You will be safe in the Morning. You are indeed
guilty of my Son’s Blood, but God is just and good, and I
thank him that I am innocent of yours, and that my Faith
given is preserved.
The Spaniards caught from the Moors this
Punto of Honour, the Effects of which remain, in a great
Degree, to this Day. So that when there is Fear of a War about to
break out between England and Spain, an English Merchant there, who
apprehends the Confiscation of his Goods as the Goods of an Enemy,
thinks them safe, if he can get a Spaniard to take Charge of them;
for the Spaniard secures them as his own, and faithfully redelivers
them, or pays the Value, whenever the Englishman can safely demand
it.
Justice to that Nation, though lately our
Enemies, and hardly yet our cordial Friends, obliges me, on this
Occasion, not to omit mentioning an Instance of Spanish Honour,
which cannot but be still fresh in the Memory of many yet living.
In 1746, when we were in hot War with Spain, the Elizabeth,
of London, Captain William Edwards, coming through the Gulph from
Jamaica, richly laden, met with a most violent Storm, in which the
Ship sprung a Leak, that obliged them, for the Saving of their
Lives, to run her into the Havannah. The Captain went on Shore,
directly waited on the Governor, told the Occasion of his putting
in, and that he surrendered his Ship as a Prize, and himself and
his Men as Prisoners of War, only requesting good Quarter. No,
Sir, replied the Spanish Governor, If we had taken you in
fair War at Sea, or approaching our Coast with hostile
Intentions, your Ship would then have been a Prize, and your
People Prisoners. But when distressed by a Tempest, you come
into our Ports for the Safety of your Lives, we, though
Enemies, being Men, are bound as such, by the Laws of Humanity,
to afford Relief to distressed Men, who ask it of us. We
cannot, even against our Enemies, take Advantage of an Act
of God. You have Leave therefore to unload your Ship, if
that be necessary, to stop the Leak; you may refit here, and
traffick so far as shall be necessary to pay the Charges;
you may then depart, and I will give you a Pass, to be in Force
till you are beyond Bermuda. If after that you are taken,
you will then be a Prize, but now you are only a Stranger,
and have a Stranger’s Right to Safety and Protection.
The Ship accordingly departed, and arrived safe in London.
Will it be permitted me to adduce, on this
Occasion, an Instance of the like Honour in a poor unenlightened
African Negroe. I find it in Capt. Seagrave’s Account of his Voyage
to Guinea. He relates that a New-England Sloop, trading there in
1752, left their second Mate, William Murray, sick on Shore, and
sailed without him. Murray was at the House of a Black, named
Cudjoe, with whom he had contracted an Acquaintance during their
Trade. He recovered, and the Sloop being gone, he continued with
his black Friend, till some other Opportunity should offer of his
getting home. In the mean while, a Dutch Ship came into the Road,
and some of the Blacks going on board her, were treacherously
seized, and carried off as Slaves. Their Relations and Friends,
transported with sudden Rage, ran to the House of Cudjoe to take
Revenge, by killing Murray. Cudjoe stopt them at the Door, and
demanded what they wanted? The White Men, said they, have carried
away our Brothers and Sons, and we will kill all White Men; give us
the White Man that you keep in your House, for we will kill him.
Nay, said Cudjoe; the White Men that carried away your
Brothers are bad Men, kill them when you can catch them; but
this White Man is a good Man, and you must not kill him.
But he is a White Man, they cried; the White Men are all bad; we
will kill them all. Nay, says he, you must not kill a
Man, that had done no Harm, only for being white. This Man
is my Friend, my House is his Fort, and I am his Soldier. I
must fight for him. You must kill me, before you can kill
him. What good Man will ever come again under my Roof, if I let
my Floor be stained with a good Man’s Blood! The Negroes
seeing his Resolution, and being convinced by his Discourse that
they were wrong, went away ashamed. In a few Days Murray ventured
abroad again with Cudjoe, when several of them took him by the
Hand, and told him they were glad they had not killed him; for as
he was a good (meaning an innocent) Man, their God would
have been angry, and would have spoiled their Fishing. I
relate this, says Captain Seagrave, to show, that some among these
dark People have a strong Sense of Justice and Honour, and that
even the most brutal among them are capable of feeling the Force of
Reason, and of being influenced by a Fear of God (if the Knowledge
of the true God could be introduced among them) since even the Fear
of a false God, when their Rage subsided, was not without its good
Effect.
Now I am about to mention something of Indians,
I beg that I may not be understood as framing Apologies for
all Indians. I am far from desiring to lessen the laudable
Spirit of Resentment in my Countrymen against those now at War with
us, so far as it is justified by their Perfidy and Inhumanity. I
would only observe that the Six Nations, as a Body, have kept Faith
with the English ever since we knew them, now near an Hundred
Years; and that the governing Part of those People have had Notions
of Honour, whatever may be the Case with the Rum-debauched,
Trader-corrupted Vagabonds and Thieves on Sasquehannah and the
Ohio, at present in Arms against us. As a Proof of that Honour, I
shall only mention one well-known recent Fact. When six Catawba
Deputies, under the Care of Colonel Bull, of Charlestown, went by
Permission into the Mohawks Country, to sue for and treat of Peace
for their Nation, they soon found the Six Nations highly
exasperated, and the Peace at that Time impracticable: They were
therefore in Fear for their own Persons, and apprehended that they
should be killed in their Way back to New-York; which being made
known to the Mohawk Chiefs, by Colonel Bull, one of them, by Order
of the Council, made his Speech to the Catawbas: “Strangers and
Enemies,
“While you are in this Country, blow away all
Fear out of your Breasts; change the black Streak of Pain on your
Cheek for a red One, and let your Faces shine with Bear’s-Grease:
You are safer here than if you were at home. The Six Nations will
not defile their own Land with the Blood of Men that come unarmed
to ask for Peace. We shall send a Guard with you, to see you safe
out of our Territories. So far you shall have Peace, but no
farther. Get home to your own Country, and there take Care of
yourselves, for there we intend to come and kill you.”
The Catawbas came away unhurt accordingly.
It is also well known, that just before the
late War broke out, when our Traders first went among the
Piankeshaw Indians, a Tribe of the Twightwees, they found the
Principle of giving Protection to Strangers in full
Force; for the French coming with their Indians to the Piankeshaw
Town, and demanding that those Traders and their Goods should be
delivered up; the Piankeshaws replied, the English were come there
upon their Invitation, and they could not do so base a Thing. But
the French insisting on it, the Piankeshaws took Arms in Defence of
their Guests, and a Number of them, with their old Chief, lost
their Lives in the Cause; the French at last prevailing by superior
Force only.
I will not dissemble that numberless Stories
have been raised and spread abroad, against not only the poor
Wretches that are murdered, but also against the Hundred and Forty
christianized Indians, still threatned to be murdered; all which
Stories are well known, by those who know the Indians best, to be
pure Inventions, contrived by bad People, either to excite each
other to join in the Murder, or since it was committed, to justify
it; and believed only by the Weak and Credulous. I call thus
publickly on the Makers and Venders of these Accusations to produce
their Evidence. Let them satisfy the Public that even Will Soc, the
most obnoxious of all that Tribe, was really guilty of those
Offences against us which they lay to his Charge. But if he was,
ought he not to have been fairly tried? He lived under our Laws,
and was subject to them; he was in our Hands, and might easily have
been prosecuted; was it English Justice to condemn and
execute him unheard? Conscious of his own Innocence, he did not
endeavour to hide himself when the Door of the Work-house, his
Sanctuary, was breaking open; I will meet them, says he,
for they are my Brothers. These Brothers of his shot him
down at the Door, while the Word Brothers was still between his
Teeth! But if Will Soc was a bad Man, what had poor old Shehaes
done? what could he or the other poor old Men and Women do? What
had little Boys and Girls done; what could Children of a Year old,
Babes at the Breast, what could they do, that they too must be shot
and hatcheted? Horrid to relate! and in their Parents Arms! This is
done by no civilized Nation in Europe. Do we come to America to
learn and practise the Manners of Barbarians? But this,
Barbarians as they are, they practise against their Enemies
only, not against their Friends.
These poor People have been always our Friends.
Their Fathers received ours, when Strangers here, with Kindness and
Hospitality. Behold the Return we have made them! When we grew more
numerous and powerful, they put themselves under our
Protection. See, in the mangled Corpses of the last Remains
of the Tribe, how effectually we have afforded it to them!
Unhappy People! to have lived in such Times,
and by such Neighbours! We have seen, that they would have been
safer among the ancient Heathens, with whom the Rites of
Hospitality were sacred. They would have been considered as
Guests of the Publick, and the Religion of the Country would
have operated in their Favour. But our Frontier People call
themselves Christians! They would have been safer, if they had
submitted to the Turks; for ever since Mahomet’s Reproof to Khaled,
even the cruel Turks, never kill Prisoners in cold Blood.
These were not even Prisoners: But what is the Example of Turks to
Scripture Christians? They would have been safer, though they had
been taken in actual War against the Saracens, if they had once
drank Water with them. These were not taken in War against us, and
have drank with us, and we with them, for Fourscore Years. But
shall we compare Saracens to Christians? They would have been safer
among the Moors in Spain, though they had been Murderers of
Sons; if Faith had once been pledged to them, and a Promise of
Protection given. But these have had the Faith of the English given
to them many Times by the Government, and, in Reliance on that
Faith, they lived among us, and gave us the Opportunity of
murdering them. However, what was honourable in Moors, may not be a
Rule to us; for we are Christians! They would have been safer it
seems among Popish Spaniards, even if Enemies, and delivered into
their Hands by a Tempest. These were not Enemies; they were born
among us, and yet we have killed them all. But shall we imitate
idolatrous Papists, we that are enlightened
Protestants? They would even have been safer among the Negroes
of Africa, where at least one manly Soul would have been found,
with Sense, Spirit and Humanity enough, to stand in their Defence:
But shall Whitemen and Christians act like a Pagan
Negroe? In short it appears, that they would have been safe in
any Part of the known World, except in the Neighbourhood of the
Christians white Savages of Peckstang and
Donegall!
O ye unhappy Perpetrators of this horrid
Wickedness! Reflect a Moment on the Mischief ye have done, the
Disgrace ye have brought on your Country, on your Religion, and
your Bible, on your Families and Children! Think on the Destruction
of your captivated Country-folks (now among the wild Indians) which
probably may follow, in Resentment of your Barbarity! Think on the
Wrath of the United Five Nations, hitherto our Friends, but now
provoked by your murdering one of their Tribes, in Danger of
becoming our bitter Enemies. Think of the mild and good Government
you have so audaciously insulted; the Laws of your King, your
Country, and your God, that you have
broken; the infamous Death that hangs over your Heads; For
Justice, though slow, will come at last.
All good People every where detest your Actions. You have imbrued
your Hands in innocent Blood; how will you make them clean? The
dying Shrieks and Groans of the Murdered, will often sound in your
Ears: Their Spectres will sometimes attend you, and affright even
your innocent Children! Fly where you will, your Consciences will
go with you: Talking in your Sleep shall betray you, in the
Delirium of a Fever you yourselves shall make your own Wickedness
known.
One Hundred and Forty peaceable Indians yet
remain in this Government. They have, by Christian Missionaries,
been brought over to a Liking, at least, of our Religion;
some of them lately left their Nation which is now at War with us,
because they did not chuse to join with them in their Depredations;
and to shew their Confidence in us, and to give us an equal
Confidence in them, they have brought and put into our Hands their
Wives and Children. Others have lived long among us in Northampton
County, and most of their Children have been born there. These are
all now trembling for their Lives. They have been hurried from
Place to Place for Safety, now concealed in Corners, then sent out
of the Province, refused a Passage through a neighbouring Colony,
and returned, not unkindly perhaps, but disgracefully, on our
Hands. O Pennsylvania! once renowned for Kindness to Strangers,
shall the Clamours of a few mean Niggards about the Expence of this
Publick Hospitality, an Expence that will not cost
the noisy Wretches Sixpence a Piece (and what is the Expence
of the poor Maintenance we afford them, compared to the Expence
they might occasion if in Arms against us) shall so senseless a
Clamour, I say, force you to turn out of your Doors these unhappy
Guests, who have offended their own Country-folks by their
Affection for you, who, confiding in your Goodness, have put
themselves under your Protection? Those whom you have disarmed to
satisfy groundless Suspicions, will you leave them exposed to the
armed Madmen of your Country? Unmanly Men! who are not ashamed to
come with Weapons against the Unarmed, to use the Sword against
Women, and the Bayonet against young Children; and who have already
given such bloody Proofs of their Inhumanity and Cruelty. Let us
rouze ourselves, for Shame, and redeem the Honour of our Province
from the Contempt of its Neighbours; let all good Men join heartily
and unanimously in Support of the Laws, and in strengthening the
Hands of Government; that Justice may be
done, the Wicked punished, and the Innocent protected; otherwise we
can, as a People, expect no Blessing from Heaven, there will be no
Security for our Persons or Properties; Anarchy and Confusion will
prevail over all, and Violence, without Judgment, dispose of every
Thing.
When I mention the Baseness of the Murderers,
in the Use they made of Arms, I cannot, I ought not to forget, the
very different Behaviour of brave Men and true
Soldiers, of which this melancholy Occasion has afforded us
fresh Instances. The Royal Highlanders have, in the Course of this
War, suffered as much as any other Corps, and have frequently had
their Ranks thinn’d by an Indian Enemy; yet they did not for this
retain a brutal undistinguishing Resentment against all
Indians, Friends as well as Foes. But a Company of them happening
to be here, when the 140 poor Indians above mentioned were thought
in too much Danger to stay longer in the Province, chearfully
undertook to protect and escort them to New-York, which they
executed (as far as that Government would permit the Indians to
come) with Fidelity and Honour; and their Captain Robinson, is
justly applauded and honoured by all sensible and good People, for
the Care, Tenderness and Humanity, with which he treated those
unhappy Fugitives, during their March in this severe Season.
General Gage, too, has approved of his Officer’s Conduct, and, as I
hear, ordered him to remain with the Indians at Amboy, and continue
his Protection to them, till another Body of the King’s Forces
could be sent to relieve his Company, and escort their Charge back
in Safety to Philadelphia, where his Excellency has had the
Goodness to direct those Forces to remain for some Time, under the
Orders of our Governor, for the Security of the Indians; the Troops
of this Province being at present necessarily posted on the
Frontier. Such just and generous Actions endear the Military to the
Civil Power, and impress the Minds of all the Discerning with a
still greater Respect for our national Government. I shall conclude
with observing, that Cowards can handle Arms, can strike
where they are sure to meet with no Return, can wound, mangle and
murder; but it belongs to brave Men to spare, and to
protect; for, as the Poet says,
Mercy still sways the Brave.
624252 = 011-042a.html