The Winning of the West, Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 472 pages of information about The Winning of the West, Volume 2.

The Winning of the West, Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 472 pages of information about The Winning of the West, Volume 2.

Towards the end of these campaigns, which marked the close of the Revolutionary struggle, Shelby was sent to the North Carolina Legislature, where he served for a couple of terms.  Then, when peace was formally declared, he removed to Kentucky, where he lived ever afterwards.  Sevier stayed in his home on the Nolichucky, to be thenceforth, while his life lasted, the leader in peace and war of his beloved mountaineers.

    Quarrels over the Land

Early in 1782 fresh difficulties arose with the Indians.  In the war just ended the Cherokees themselves had been chiefly to blame.  The whites were now in their turn the aggressors the trouble being, as usual, that they encroached on lands secured to the red men by solemn treaty.  The Watauga settlements had been kept compact by the presence of the neighboring Indians.  They had grown steadily but slowly.  They extended their domain slightly after every treaty, such treaty being usually though not always the sequel to a successful war; but they never gained any large stretch of territory at once.  Had it not been for the presence of the hostile tribes they would have scattered far and wide over the country, and could not have formed any government.

The preceding spring (1781) the land office had been closed, not to be opened until after peace with Great Britain was definitely declared, the utter demoralization of the government bringing the work to a standstill.  The rage for land speculation, however, which had continued, even in the stormiest days of the Revolution, grew tenfold in strength after Yorktown, when peace at no distant day was assured.  The wealthy land speculators of the seaboard counties made agreements of various sorts with the more prominent frontier leaders in the effort to secure large tracts of good country.  The system of surveying was much better than in Kentucky, but it was still by no means perfect, as each man placed his plot wherever he chose, first describing the boundary marks rather vaguely, and leaving an illiterate old hunter to run the lines.  Moreover, the intending settler frequently absented himself for several months, or was temporarily chased away by the Indians, while the official record books were most imperfect.  In consequence, many conflicts ensued.  The frontiersmen settled on any spot of good land they saw fit, and clung to it with defiant tenacity, whether or not it afterwards proved to be on a tract previously granted to some land company or rich private individual who had never been a hundred miles from the sea-coast.  Public officials went into these speculations.  Thus Major Joseph Martin, while an Indian agent, tried to speculate in Cherokee lands. [Footnote:  See Va.  State Papers, III., 560.] Of course the officer’s public influence was speedily destroyed when he once undertook such operations; he could no longer do justice to outsiders.  Occasionally the falseness of his position made him unjust to the Indians; more often it forced him into league with the latter, and made him hostile to the borderers. [Footnote:  This is a chief reason why the reports of the Indian agents are so often bitterly hostile towards those of their own color.]

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The Winning of the West, Volume 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.