Three Rivers
Hudson~Mohawk~Schoharie
History From America's Most Famous Valleys

Border Wars

of the American Revolution
by William L. Stone. Volume I
New York: Harper & Brothers, 1843.

CHAPTER XIV.

THE opening of the year 1778 was marked by an event that diffused universal joy among the people. It had been rightly judged by American statesmen, that, smarting under the loss which France had experienced by the war ending in 1763, of her broad North American possessions, the government of that country would be nothing loth to aid in the infliction of a like dismemberment of territory upon Great Britain. With a view, therefore, of cultivating friendly relations with France, and deriving assistance from her if possible, commissioners had been despatched to the court of Versailles, in 1776, with the plan of a treaty of amity and commerce to be submitted to that government. Still, more than a year had elapsed, during which the commissioners* had been exerting themselves to the utmost to obtain a recognition of the independence of the United States, without success. It was evident that France looked upon the revolt of the American colonies with secret satisfaction; but she had been so much weakened by the former contest, that time was needed for repose and recovery of her strength. Hence, from the arrival of the commissioners in the French capital, in December, 1776, to the close of 1777, they had been living upon "hope deferred." It is true that the Americans received great assistance from the French in supplies of arms and ammunition ; and although not openly allowed, yet means were found by the American privateers secretly to dispose of their prizes in French ports.

* The commissioners were Benjamin Franklin, Silas Deane, and Arthur Lee. Mr. Jefferson had been originally designated as one of the commissioners, but, declining the appointment, Mr, Lee was selected in his stead.

Still, the government was lavish in its professions of friendship for England, even though confidentially giving the Americans strong assurances of sympathy and ultimate assistance. The untoward result of Burgoyne's campaign, intelligence of which was received in Paris early in December, was the opportune means of ending this vascillating policy on the part of the court of Versailles. The feelings of the French people towards England could no longer be disguised, since the news occasioned as much general joy as though the victory had been achieved by their own arms. The consequence was, that, on the 6th of February, the French government entered into treaties of amity, commerce, and alliance with the United States, on principles of the most perfect reciprocity and equality. The French cabinet clearly foresaw that this measure would soon produce a war between themselves and England, and acted in the expectation of such a consequence. Indeed, M. Girard, one of the French secretaries of state, in his conferences with the American commissioners, had the frankness to avow that they were not acting wholly for the sake of the United States, but because they thought the moment a favourable one for humbling their haughty rival, by aiding in the dismemberment of her empire. Hence, the king had not only determined to acknowledge the independence of the United States, but to support it, without the expectation of compensation.

The news of the treaty with France was not received in the United States until late in the spring.*

* The event was commemorated in the American camp, on the 7th of May, in a style corresponding with its importance, a general order for the celebration having been issued by the commander-in-chief. It began as follows : " It having pleased the Almighty Ruler of the Universe to defend the cause of the United American States, and finally to raise us up a powerful friend among the princes of the earth to establish our liberty and independence upon a lasting foundation, it becomes us to set apart a day for gratefully acknowledging the Divine goodness, and celebrating the important event, which, we owe to his divine interposition."

The pageant was strictly military, and is described by the letters of that day as exceedingly brilliant. The joy manifested was unfeigned and unspeakable. The commander-in-chief dined in public with all the officers of his arroy. " When his excellency took his leave, there was a universal clap, with loud huzzas, which continued until he had proceeded a quarter of a mile, during which time there were a thousand hats tossed in the air. His excellency turned round with his retinue, and huzzaed several times."-Letter of an officer.
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Meantime other circumstances occurred during the winter, in the northern part of New-York, deserving of note in the present narrative. First among these was the notable project of General Gates for a second descent, in mid-winter, upon Canada. In November following the defeat of Burgoyne, on the reorganization of the Board of War, Gates, in the first flush of his popularity, was placed at its head as president. He had not been long at Yorktown, where Congress was then in session, before he conceived the project of directing an irruption into Canada across the ice upon Lake Champlain, for the purpose of destroying the stores and shipping of the enemy at St. John's, and, possibly, of striking a sudden blow upon Montreal. It was subsequently but too well ascertained that the condition of the Northern army, with which Gates certainly ought to have been acquainted, was by no means such as to warrant the undertaking of any offensive enterprise. Still, the victorious commander of the North had the address to obtain a vote of Congress directing the expedition, the conduct of which was intrusted to the Marquis de Lafayette. This gallant young nobleman had been burning with a desire to distinguish himself in a separate command, and this project opened to him the prospect of realizing the object dearest to his heart.

But neither in the inception nor in the maturing of the enterprise had the commander-in-chief been consulted ; and the first knowledge he possessed of the project was derived from a letter from General Gates, enclosing another to the marquis, informing him of his appointment to the command. The disrespect to the commander-in-chief, to whom the youthful soldier was bound by the strongest ties of friendship and respect, was so manifest, that the marquis at first hesitated in accepting the command. Nor was his reluctance lessened by the suspicious circumstance that General Conway, the base instrument of the Gates faction in the conspiracy against Washington, had been assigned as his second in command. Soaring above all selfish considerations, however, Washington advised the marquis to accept the trust confided to him by Congress. Lafayette, therefore, repaired from the camp at Valley Forge to Yorktown, to be more particularly advised as to the object and the details of the enterprise. The plan of organizing alight but efficient force, to make a sudden dash upon St. John's, and destroy the flotilla which gave the enemy the command of Lake Champlain, and to inflict such farther injury as might be effected in a rapid campaign, was fully unfolded to him. Ample supplies of men and means were promised by Gates ; and, after securing the services of the Baron de Kalb to the expedition-an officer older in rank than Conway, who would necessarily be his second in command-the marquis accepted the appointment.

Full of high hopes, a brilliant enterprise before him, and panting for an opportunity to signalize himself in a separate command, the marquis pushed forward to Albany, amid all the rigours of winter, to enter at once upon the service, and apparently with as much confidence as though he had achieved the exploit. Sad, however, was his disappointment at the posture of affairs on his arrival at Albany. Conway, who had arrived there three days before him, at once assured him that the expedition was quite impossible. Such, likewise, was the opinion of Generals Schuyler, Lincoln, and Arnold, the latter two of whom were detained at Albany by the unhealed wounds received upon the fields of Saratoga. Indeed, he was not long in ascertaining, from the quartermaster, commissary, and clothier-generals, that there was a lamentable deficiency of almost every necessary of which he had been led to expect an abundant supply. The number of troops was altogether inadequate. Three thousand effective men were believed to be the smallest force that would suffice, and that number was promised. But scarcely twelve hundred could be mustered fit for duty, and the greater part of these were too naked even for a summer campaign. Their pay was greatly in arrear, and officers and men were alike indisposed to the service.* Originally it had been intended to confide the proposed expedition to General Stark, whose prowess at the battle of Bennington had rendered him exceedingly popular with the people; and it was supposed that he could at once bring into the field a sufficient number of his mountaineers to strike the blow with success. Stark was invited to Albany, and James Duane was sent thither from Congress to confer with him upon the subject. But the inducement offered by Congress being in the form of a bounty, contingent only upon success, was thought not sufficient; and when a representation of the circumstances was made by Mr. Duane to that body, the scheme was changed and enlarged, at the suggestion of General Gates, according to the plan which the marquis was to execute.

Having attentively examined the situation of affairs and the means within his control, and consult-

* On the 19th of February, James Duane wrote to Governor Clinton respecting this impracticability of the enterprise, since the marquis could find neither the troops nor the preparations. ln the course of his letter, Mr. Duane said of the marquis. In his zeal for this country, of which he has given marks even to enthusiasm, and his ardent desire of glory, lead him to wish the expedition practicable ; but he is too considerate to pursue it rashly, or without probable grounds of a successful issue. I must mention to your excellency a circumstance which shows the liberality of his disposition. He determined on his entering into Canada, to supply his army through his own private bills on France to the amount of five or six thousand guineas, and to present that sum to Congress as a proof of his love to America and the lights of human nature."

ed with the several able captains at Albany, the young soldier saw with inexpressible chagrin that the obstacles were insuperable. In the language of another, amounting to a bitter satire, whether thus intended, or not, the generals only were got in readiness;" and the gallant marquis was compelled to relinquish the enterprise, without even the poor privilege of making an attempt. He certainly had great reason, not only for vexation, but disgust: advised, as he had been, to announce to his court the degree of confidence reposed in him by Congress, in thus confiding to him a separate command of such importance; not, of course, suspecting, for a moment, that General Gates could be so ignorant of the actual situation of the department from which he had been so recently transferred.

The true position of affairs at Albany having been made known to Congress, it was resolved to instruct the marquis to suspend the expedition, and, at the same time, to assure him "that Congress entertained a high sense of his prudence, activity, and zeal; and that they were fully persuaded nothing would have been wanting on his own part, or on the part of the officers who accompanied him, to give the expedition the utmost possible effect."

But to return to the Indian affairs of the Mohawk Valley. Early in the year, various unpleasant symptoms were perceptible, indicating the design of a renewed and more extensive Indian war than had been anticipated at any previous moment. Information was received from the remote West of a general disposition among the nations in the region of the great lakes, and the Upper Mississippi, to join the Mohawks, Cayugas, Onondagas, and Senecas, against the United States. The master-spirit of those threatened movements was Joseph Brant, whose winterquarters were at the central and convenient point of Niagara. Nor were Sir John Johnson and his associates, Claus and Butler, inactive, while the British commander at Detroit, Colonel Hamilton, was at the same time exercising a powerful influence over the surrounding nations of the forest. On the opening of the year, therefore, great fears were entertained for the security of the frontiers from the Mohawk to the Ohio. Still, with the Six Nations Congress resolved to make yet another effort of conciliation-to secure their neutrality, if nothing farther. Accordingly, on the 3d of February, resolutions were passed directing a council to be held with these nations at Johnstown, in the county of Tryon. General Schuyler and Volkert P. Douw were appointed commissioners for that purpose, and Governor Clinton was requested to designate a special commissioner, to be present on the occasion. In pursuance of this solicitation, James Duane was appointed for that duty. The resolutions of Congress instructed the commissioners " to speak to the Indians in language becoming the representatives of free, sovereign, and independent states, and in such a tone as would convince them that they felt themselves to be so." It was left to the discretion of the 'commissioners to determine whether it would be prudent to insist upon their taking up arms in behalf of the States, or to content themselves with efforts to secure their neutrality.

The directions were, that the council should be holden between the 15th and 20th of February; but so slow or reluctant were the Indians in assembling; that the proceedings were not commenced until the 9th of March. Whether General Schuyler attended is not known. The Marquis de Lafayette, who was then temporarily in command of the Northern Department, accompanied Mr. Duane to Johnstown, and was present at the council. More than seven hundred Indians were collected at the treaty, consisting of Oneidas, Tuscaroras, Onondagas, a few Mohawks, and three or four Cayugas; but not a single Seneca, which was by far the most powerto send a message, affecting great surprise, "that while our tomahawks were sticking in their heads, their wounds bleeding, and their eyes streaming with tears for the loss of their friends at German Flatts, the commissioners should think, of inviting them to a treaty'."

The proceedings were opened by an address from Congress, framed in accordance with the spirit of the resolutions already cited, asserting the power of the United States, and their magnanimous conduct towards the Six Nations ; and charging them distinctly with the ingratitude, cruelty, and treachery with which their pacific advances had been requited, and for which reparation was demanded. From this charge of treachery the Oneidas and Tuscaroras were not only honourably excepted, but, on the contrary, were applauded for their firmness and integrity, and assured of friendship and protection. An Onondaga chief spoke in behalf of the guilty tribes. He exculpated himself and his brother sachems, casting the blame on the young and headstrong warriors, who, he said, would not listen to prudent councils, illustrating their own internal difficulties by those occasionally existing among the people of the States, which it was, at times, found impossible to repress. He also spoke of the difficulty they were obliged to encounter in withstanding the influence of Butler and others in the service of the crown, acquired by bribery and other kindred artifices.

An Oneida chief answered for his own nation and the Tuscaroras, with a spirit and dignity which would not have disgraced a Roman senator. He pathetically lamented the degeneracy of the unfriendly tribes; predicted their final destruction; and declared the fixed and unalterable resolution of the tribes which he represented, at every hazard, to hold fast the covenant chain with the United States, and be buried with them in the same grave, or with them to enjoy the fruits of victory and peace. He fully evinced the sincerity of these professions, by desiring that the United States would erect a fortress in their country, and station a small garrison within it for their defence. A promise to this effect having been given, the Oneida concluded with a solemn assurance that the two nations for whom he spoke would at all times be ready to co-operate with the United States against all their enemies. In a private interview afterward, the Oneidas warned the commissioners against trusting to the Onondagas, whom they considered as enemies to the United States, notwithstanding their seeming contrition for the past. The Oneidas declared that they had not the least doubt that the Onondagas, Cayugas, and Senecas would renew their hostilities early in the spring; that Colonel Butler would again be in possession of Oswego, which he would more strongly fortify; and for these events they entreated the commissioners to be prepared.

The inhabitants of Tryon county, many of whom were spectators at the council, were highly gratified with the proceedings ; and it was supposed that the moral effect would be good, not only in regard to the Oneidas, but also upon the Onondagas, those tribes being closely connected by intermarriages; but the commissioners left the council under the full persuasion that from the Senecas, Cayugas, and the greater part of the Mohawks, nothing but revenge for their lost friends and tarnished glory at Oriskany and Fort Schuyler was to be anticipated; more especially since the enemy was so plentifully supplied with the means of corruption, while it was not in the power of the United States so much as to furnish their best friends with the necessaries of life, even in the course of trade. Still, in order, as far as possible, to regain some of their lost ascendency over the Indians, by means of traffic, the commissioners of that department were shortly afterward authorized by Congress to open a trading establishment at Fort Schuyler. But the inadequacy of the provision must be evident, from the fact that the slender exchequer of the government allowed an appropriation of no greater sum for that important object than ten thousand dollars,

While at Johnstown during this visit, the Marquis de Lafayette was waited upon by Colonel Campbell and others, for the purpose of calling his attention to the exposed situation of Cherry Valley. The consequence was an order for the erection of a fort at that place. An engineer was detailed upon that duty, and detachments of troops were ordered both to that place and Schoharie. Three slight fortifications had been built in the valley of the Schoharie Kill during the preceding year, called the Upper, Middle, and Lower Forts. These works were merely circumvallations of earth and, wood, thrown up around some strong dwelling-houses constructed of stone, within which the women and children were placed in moments of peculiar danger. The church was the citadel of the Lower Fort, and all were manned by small companies of soldiers, having each a single brass fieldpiece. The marquis likewise directed the erection of a fort in the Oneida country, pursuant to the request of the Indians of that nation.

It was but too evident, from the reports borne upon every western breeze, that all these measures of precaution in that direction were necessary. To the Johnsons and their adherents the recovery of the Valley of the Mohawk was an object of the first importance; and they watched every opportunity of moving in that quarter which promised even a possible chance of success. Even while the marquis was present with the Indian commissioners at Johnstown, no less a personage than a British colonel, a nephew of Sir Guy Carleton, and bearing the same honourable name, was well understood to be lurking in that vicinity as a spy. Every effort was made for his arrest; and, as an inducement to the militia and Indians to be on the alert, the marquis offered a reward of fifty guineas from his own purse.

But the search was fruitless. Carleton was an active and efficient partisan officer, and was never taken. The marquis retained the command at the North only until the middle of April, when he was ordered to headquarters, and Gates again assumed the command of the department.

In the month of June, the Loyalists who had fled to Canada with Sir John Johnson, to the number of one hundred and upward, performed an exploit equally bold and remarkable, which naturally suggests the inquiry, Where were the Whigs of Tryon county at that time; and in what were they engaged? The incident to which reference is had was the return of those selfsame Loyalists for their families, whom they were permitted to collect together, and with whom they were suffered to depart into the country, and the active service of the enemy. Nor was this all. Not only was no opposition made to their proceedings, but on their way they actually committed acts of flagrant hostility, destroyed property, and took several prisoners. Having completed their arrangements, they moved northward from Fort Hunter, through Fonda's Bush, making four prisoners on their way thither, and at Fonda's Bush five others. From this place they proceeded across the great marsh to Sir William Johnson's fish-house, on the Sacondaga, capturing a man named Martin, and another named Harris, on the way, and at the fish-house taking a brave fellow named Solomon Woodworth, and four others. They burned the house and out-buildings of Godfrey Shew at this place, and departed with their prisoners, leaving the women and children houseless. Embarking on the Sacondaga in light canoes, previous-

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ly moored at that place for the purpose, they descended twenty-five miles to the Hudson, and thence, by the way of Lakes George and Champlain, proceeded to St. John's in safety. The day after his capture, Woodworth succeeded in making his escape. At St. John's, John Shew and four others were given up to the Indians, by whom they were taken to their village in Canada. They were neither considered nor treated exactly as prisoners of war; and Shew, with three of his companions, soon afterward escaped and returned home.* From St. John's the loyal party proceeded down the St. Lawrence to Quebec, where the residue of the prisoners were kept in close confinement about four months. Some of the number died, and the remainder were sent to Halifax, and thence exchanged by the way of Boston. This movement of the Tories back in a body to their deserted homes, and its success, form one of the most extraordinary incidents, though in itself comparatively unimportant, which transpired during the wars of the Mohawk country.

With the opening of the season for active operations-though he was himself never inactive-Thayendanegea had again returned to his former haunts on the Susquehanna, Oghkwaga and Unadilla. He soon proved himself an active and dreaded partisan. No matter for the difficulties or the distance, wherever a blow could be struck to any advantage, Joseph Brant was sure to be there. Frequent, moreover, were the instances in which individuals, and even whole families in the outskirts of the settlements, disappeared, without any knowledge on the part of those who were left that an enemy had been near them. "The smoking ruins of their

*In the autumn of 1780, young Shew was again captured by a scouting party of Indians and Tones, in the woods in the neighbourhood of Ballston, and, at the instigation of one of the latter, named John Parker, was immediately murdered. Parker was himself soon afterward taken as a spy by Captain Bernett of the militia, carried to Albany, tried, convicted, and executed.

dwellings, the charred bones of the dead," and the slaughtered carcasses of the domestic animals, were the only testimonials of the cause of the catastrophe, until the return of a captive, or the disclosures of some prisoner taken from the foe, furnished more definite information. But there is no good evidence that Brant was himself a participator in secret murders, or attacks upon isolated individuals or families; and there is much reason to believe that the bad feelings of many of the Loyalists induced them to perpetrate greater enormities themselves, and prompt the parties of Indians whom they often led to commit greater barbarities than the savages would have done had they been left to themselves.

In support of the foregoing opinion of Captain Brant, the following incident, occurring in the summer of the present year, may be adduced. A lad in Albany county, named William M'Kean, while engaged in raking hay alone in a meadow, happening to turn round, perceived an Indian very near him. Startled at his perilous situation, he raised his rake for defence, but his fears were instantly dissipated by the savage, who said, "Do not be afraid, young man; I shall not hurt you." He then inquired of the youth for the residence of a Loyalist named Foster. The lad gave him the proper direction, and inquired of the Indian whether he knew Mr. Foster. "I am partially acquainted with him," was the reply, "having once seen him at the Half-way Creek." The Indian then inquired the lad's name ; and having been informed, he added, "You are a son of Captain M'Kean who lives in the northeast part of the town, I suppose: I know your father very well: he lives neighbour to Captain M'Kean: I know M'Kean very well, and a very fine fellow he is, too." Imboldened by the familiar discourse of the Indian, the lad ventured to ask his name in turn. Hesitating for a moment, his rather unwelcome visitor replied, "My name is Brant!" "What! Captain Brant?" eagerly demanded the youth. " No : I am a cousin of his," was the rejoinder ; but accompanied by a smile and a look that plainly disclosed the transparent deception. It was none other than the terrible Thayendanegea himself.

On the other hand, the following tragic circumstance sustains the assertion that the Tories were oftentimes more cruel than their savage associates. "While a party of hostiles were prowling about the borders of Schoharie, the Indians killed and scalped a mother, and a large family of children. They had just completed the work of death, when some Loyalists of the party came up, and discovered an infant breathing sweetly in its cradle. An Indian warrior, noted for his barbarity, approached the cradle with his uplifted hatchet. The babe looked up in bis face, and smiled; the feelings of nature triumphed over the ferocity of the savage; the hatchet fell with his arm, and he was about stooping down to take the innocent in his arms, when one of the Loyalists, cursing him for his humanity, thrust it through with his bayonet; and, thus transfixed, held it up struggling in the agonies of death, as he exclaimed,' This, too, is a rebel.'' "

To guard against these painful transactions, nothing short of the most exemplary watchfulness would suffice. Not only their habitations, but those who laboured in the fields, were guarded, being themselves armed at their ploughs, like the labourers of the prophet in rebuilding the walls of Jerusalem. Nor was this vigilance confined to any particular location. The inhabitants around the whole border, from Saratoga, north of Johnstown, and west to the German Flatts, thence south stretching down to Unadilla, and thence eastwardly crossing the Susquehanna, along the Charlotte River to Harpersfield, and thence back to Albany, were necessarily an armed yeomanry, watching for themselves, and standing sentinels for each other in turn; harassed daily by conflicting rumours; now admonished of the approach of the foe in the night by the glaring flames of a neighbour's house; or compelled suddenly to escape from his approach, at a time and in a direction the least expected. Such was the tenure of human existence around the confines of this whole district of country, from the spring of 1777 to the end of the contest in 1782.

The first movement of Brant himself, this season (1778), was upon the settlement of Springfield, a small town at the head of Otsego Lake, lying directly west of Cherry Valley, about ten miles. Those of the men who did not fly were taken prisoners. The chieftain then burned the entire settlement, with the exception of a single house, into which he collected all the women and children, and left them uninjured.

It was reported in the month of June that Brant, whose forces were increasing at Unadilla, was fortifying that post; and Captain M'Kean was despatched with a small patrol in that direction, by the people of Cherry Valley, to make observation. Arriving at a house about twenty-five miles from that place, Captain M'Kean was informed that Brant had been there with fifty men that day, and would probably return in the evening. M'Kean was at first disposed to take possession of the house, and attempt its defence, his force consisting of but five men, exclusive of himself. But, ultimately forming a more prudent resolution, he withdrew "his forces" before nightfall, and returned home without having reconnoitred the chieftain's position at Unadilla. In the course of his journey, he wrote a letter to Brant, upbraiding him for the predatory system of warfare in which he was engaged, and challenging him either to single combat, or to meet him with an equal number of men and have a pitched battle, adding, that if he would come to Cherry

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Valley, they would change him from a Brant to a "goose." This chivalrous missive was fastened to a stick, and placed in an Indian path. No modern postoffice could have transmitted the letter with greater speed or safety. The "contents" were "noted" by Brant in a letter addressed to Mr. Parcifer Carr, a Loyalist living some fifteen or twenty miles north, upon the Unadilla settlement, to whom the chief wrote for provisions. He also solicited Mr. Carr to allow two or three of his men to join him, and likewise to send him a few guns, with some ammunition; adding-, "I mean now to fight the cruel rebels as well as I can." In a postscript, he intimated that the people of Cherry Valley, though very bold in words, would find themselves mistaken in calling him a "goose." Whether the challenge of Captain M'Kean, and the pun upon the chieftain's name, had any influence upon his subsequent conduct in that section of the country, is not known.

On the 2d of July a smart engagement took place, on the upper branch of the Cobleskill, between a party of regular troops and Schoharie militia under Captain Christian Brown, and a large body of Indians. There were twenty-two militiamen and thirty regulars, the latter under charge of a lieutenant whose name has not been preserved. The Indians, by their own account, were four hundred and fifty strong. They were victorious, the Americans retreating with a loss of fourteen killed, eight wounded, and two missing. The Indians burned several houses, killed and destroyed all the horses and cattle which they could not drive away, and took considerable plunder besides. They remained in the woods adjoining the battle-ground one day and two nights, dressing the wounded, and packing up their booty, with which they retired unmolested.

Thenceforward, until the close of the war, the settlements of Schoharie were perpetually harassed by the strolling bands of the enemy, until at length they were entirely laid waste by a formidable invasion. The principal of these settlements was the vale of the Schoharie Kill-doubly inviting from the beauty of its scenery and the fertility of its soil-which was even then thickly inhabited. But although frequently doomed to suffer from the savage tomahawk, justice, nevertheless, demands the admission, that the first blood was drawn in that valley, and the first act of barbarity committed, by the white man, upon the body of an Indian sachem.

The circumstances leading to the outrage were these : At an early stage of the contest, the officers of the crown made a very strenuous effort to control the popular feeling, and preserve the loyalty of the people of Schoharie. For this purpose, not only the regular militia of the settlements, but all the male population capable of bearing arms, were required to meet the king's commissioners at the house of Captain George Mann, a Loyalist of great wealth and influence, to take the oath of allegiance. They assembled in arms, and were kept on parade, day after day, as they slowly gathered at the place of rendezvous in obedience to the requisition. Those who were Loyalists at heart readily took the oath; but great reluctance was manifested on the part of those whose predilections ran with the Whigs. These, however, were threatened with the pains and penalties of arrest, confiscation, and death, in case of refusal; so that for the most part they complied with the demand of the commissioners, and took the oath of fidelity to the crown. Immediately on taking the oath, the hat of the subject was decorated with a piece of scarlet cloth; while some of those most strongly desirous of manifesting their loyalty wore scarlet caps. Prominent among the latter class were Lodwig Snyder, of the Danesburg settlement, and a Mohawk sachem named Peter Nickus, who gave offence to the Whigs by brandishing his tomahawk and occasionally sounding the war-whoop.

But there were a few bold spirits upon whom neither the threats of his majesty's officers nor the menaces of the Indians in their company had any effect. They refused peremptorily to take the oath. Chief among these were Nicholas Sternberg and William Deitz, who left the parade on the evening of the first or second day, and returned to their homes, bitterly denounced as rebels and traitors by the Royalists, and threatened with a visit of Tones and Indians during the night. To avoid an arrest, Sternberg took to the woods at evening, leaving his; family in great anxiety, although the slaves, of whom he possessed a large number, volunteered to defend their mistress and the children. But there was no pursuit, and the recusants both returned to the parade on the following day, determined, of course, to render all proper obedience to the laws yet in force, but equally determined not to take the oath of allegiance; although Mrs. Sternberg besought her husband, with tears, not to jeopard his own safety, and the lives of his family, by longer refusal. Nay, she went farther; and appealing to the Bible, the good woman showed him the passage in which all men are enjoined "to fear God and honour the king." But it was with Sternberg as with the Puritans. He believed that "opposition to tyrants was obedience to God," as implicitly as did the regicides who engraved that immortal sentiment upon the New-Haven rock; and he was inflexible in his purpose.

Fortunately, however, in the course of the day affairs took quite a different turn. It was at about the middle of the afternoon that Captain Mann mustered those who had taken the oath and received the red badge. They numbered one hundred and upward, and were paraded before the captain's own house to perform their martial exercise, when their attention was arrested by the sound of steeds trampling in the distance. A moment longer, and a cloud of horsemen came galloping along the highway from the direction of Albany, with drawn swords flashing brightly in the sun. These unexpected visitors proved to be Captain Woodbake and two hundred cavalry, the object of whose approach was to disperse the royal gathering, and proclaim the government of the Republic. Their arrival was exceedingly inopportune for Captain Mann, who was cut short in the midst of a loyal oration, in which he was commending his citizen-soldiers for their loyalty, and threatening those who refused the badge of their sovereign with vengeance, swift and inevitable. As the cavalry approached, Captain Mann took to his heels and fled, while his loyal followers, many of whom had assumed the before-mentioned insignia, and signed the royal muster-roll on compulsion, either followed his example, or threw away their red caps, and tore off the scarlet patches from their hats, with the utmost possible expedition. Orders were immediately issued by Captain Woodbake that Mann should be taken and brought to him, alive, if possible, but if not-not. Numbers started in pursuit, while those who remained upon the ground were collected into line, and a proclamation was read to them by Captain Woodbake, declaring the royal authority at an end, pronouncing the acts of the king's commissioners null and void, and absolving the people from the oath of allegiance just taken, upon the ground that, by the laws neither of God nor man, are oaths binding which have been taken upon compulsion. Commending those who had refused to take the oath for their patriotism, he informed them that a committee of safety must be appointed, who would temporarily be invested with the civil and military authority of the district, and until, by elections and otherwise, the government could be organized in a more regular manner. Nicholas Sternberg and William Deitz were thereupon nominated by Woodbake to serve as said committee, and invested orally -with all necessary power for the government of the district; and the people were enjoined to obedience.

The affairs of the government having thus been settled, all hands were ordered in pursuit of Captain Mann, and sentinels were posted at different points of observation. Among these was Mr. Sternberg's eldest son, Lambert, who was stationed by the side of a wheat-stack, sheltered by a roof of thatch upon four posts. The orders were strict, that, if Mann would not surrender, he must be shot. Towards evening, on the approach of a thundergust, young Sternberg, who was a lad of only sixteen years, climbed to the top of the wheat-stack for shelter, where, to his great surprise, he stumbled upon the loyal captain. The youth informed him at once that he must surrender or be shot. The captain implored for mercy, declaring that he dared not to surrender himself to Woodbake, because his life would be taken. The youth repeated that his orders were explicit, and he must surrender or be shot. But Mann had lived a neighbour to his father, had ever been kind to him, and his heart failed at the thought of taking his life. He then proposed to the captain to fire his musket by way of alarm, that others might come and take him. But this was objected to by Mann with equal earnestness. It now thundered and lightened fearfully, while the rain descended in torrents. Watching his opportunity, therefore, and availing himself of the conflict of the elements, and that, also, which was working in the bosom of his young neighbour, so suddenly placed in hostile array against him, Mann contrived to spring from his hiding place, and, by sliding down upon one of the barrack-posts, effected his escape into a cornfield, and thence into the woods. The stripling soldier fired, as in duty bound, but doubtless rejoiced that the shot was without effect. On the next day, information having been received that a body of Indians were lurking in the neighbourhood of Middleburg, a few miles farther up the valley, Captain Woodbake proceeded thither with his squadron of horse. The only Indian seen was the before-mentioned sachem, Peter Nickus, who was discovered in a thicket of hazel bushes, and immediately brought to the ground by a shot that broke his thigh. Several pistols were simultaneously snapped at him, but without effect; the troops then dismounted, and, running upon the wounded Indian, inhumanly hacked him to pieces with their swords. Peter Nickus was therefore the first victim of the Revolution in the Valley of the Schoharie Kill, nor does it appear that he had himself, been guilty of any act of positive hostility.

All search for Captain Mann was, for the time, fruitless. He succeeded in escaping to the mountains, where he remained fifteen days; but at length was induced to surrender through the intervention of friends, on condition that he should receive no personal injury. He was thereupon, taken to Albany, and kept in confinement to the end of the war.

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