A Chronology of the Colonial History of
North America |
The hunger for land of their
own pulled not only recent immigrants from the Old World but
also the descendants of Europeans whose families had come to
North America a century or longer before the French and Indian
War erupted. Countless men, some alone, others accompanied by
family, sought adventure or to escape a life in the East gone
wrong. Still others were sent into the frontier as agents of
wealthy English and colonial land owners, merchants or
financiers.
The historian Charles Andrews described the period in North
America that spans the first settlements in the 1600s to the
beginning of the French and Indian War as a time of salutary
neglect during which the European-Americans developed a
strong sense of independence; and, at the frontier, the people
who came and survived also developed a strong distaste for any
government but of their making.
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1771 (April)
Simon Kenton, born in Virginia to a family of tenant
farmers, becomes enraged with another man over the affections of
a young woman. Kenton, who is sixteen years of age, sneaks up on
his adversary and attacks him ruthlessly. Believing he has
killed the man in this fight, Kenton departs for the frontier
toward Fort Pitt. Along the way, he takes the name Butler.
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1771 (June)
Marmaduke Van Swearingen, a young Virginian who
greatly admires what he sees as the free life of the indigenous
warrior, is captured by a Shawnee hunting party. As,
Weh-yah-pih-ehr-sehn-wah (Blue Jacket), he is adopted into the
tribe and goes on to lead the life of warrior, and eventually,
Shawnee warchief.
Upon arrival at the Shawnee village Kispoko Town,
Weh-yah-pih-ehr-sehn-wag is required to run a gauntlet of
several hundred Shawnees to prove his courage.
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1771 (July)
Simon Kenton teams, briefly, with several rough
frontiersmen headed for the Can-tuc-kee hunting grounds far down
the Ohio River. This group was headed by Jacob Greathouse, who
hated the indigenous people greatly and proved capable of
matching or exceeding whatever cruelty they might exhibit.
Kenton is left behind when Greathouse and the others leave on a
rescue mission to free a captured frontiersman from the
Delawares. |
1771 (November)
Simon Kenton joins two frontiersmen on a trip to
Can-tuc-kee. After a successful hunt, they are surprised by a
war party and one of the group is killed. Simon Kenton is forced
to flee without clothing, weapons or food into the forest. Six
days later he comes across Jacob Greathouse at the
Spay-lay-wi-theepi (Ohio River) and is rescued. |
1773
Approaching a group of surveyors encamped on the
north shore of the Spay-lay-wi-theepi in violation of an
existing treaty the Shawnee warrior Peshewa is shot and killed.
The Shawness now began a period of undeclared warfare in
retaliation. |
1773 (December)
Colonists of the Massachusetts Bay colony dump crates
of tea into Boston Harbor as a protest against the Tea Act.
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1774 (April)
A large group headed by Jacob Greathouse lures a
group of Mingo braves and the family of Tal-ga-yee-ta (known as
Logan to the English) into a trap, killing and in horrible
fashion mutilating the bodies of many. Tal-ga-yee-ta, who had
long remained neutral in the struggles between French and
English and the other tribes, now declares that "his
tomahawk would not again be grounded until he had taken ten
lives for every one that was slain..." |
1774 (May)
At Fort Pitt, Simon Kenton meets the frontiersman
Simon Girty, who had been taken as a child prisoner by one of
the Ohio River valley tribes and later released in a prisoner
exchange. Kenton rescues Girty from a beating by a militia
officer. Shortly thereafter, Kenton joins a company of militia
being formed by George Rogers Clark. |
1774 (July)
Sir William Johnson dies at his home in the Mohawk
Valley after a long period of fevers and other illnesses,
including syphillis. Johnson had called a council with the
Iroquois to secure their support for English interests in any
troubles to come between England and the colonials. Johnson's
death left the Iroquois, and the Mohawks, in particular, in a
precarious position in which they realized there was probably no
possibility of emerging any longer as a powerful nation. |
1774 (October 13)
Thayendanegea, now working with the new
Superintendent of Indian Affairs, Colonel Guy Johnson, addresses
the annual congress of the Iroquois nation. A major decision to
be made was whether to support the British against the American'
colonials: "I do not pretend to know which is the wisest
course for us. There are many things to consider before so grave
a step should be made. In all matters, our chief concern must be
our own future as six individual nations and as a great League.
We are no longer as numerous or as powerful as we once were. The
reason is partly that so many of our brave warriors and chiefs
were killed when once before we found ourselves between two
white forces bent upon one another's destruction. ...Should war
break out aganst among the whites, we may be drawn into it
whether or not we desire to be. We need therefore to study the
strengths and weaknesses of those whites who would war against
one another and, if we must fight, then choose, for the sake of
the perpetuation of our nations, the side which will win. In
whatever decision is made we must, above all else, remain
united." |
1774 (October)
Some 1,000 Shawnees, Mingoes, Delawares and Wyandots
attack a force of Virginia militia at the Battle of Point
Pleasant where the Great Kanawha enters the Ohio River. Among
the Shawnee casualties is Pucksinwah, father of Tecumseh. The
Shawnees pull back after the loss of only about twenty warriors.
Back in their villages the Shawnee warriors, worried that the
Shawmanese (the long knives') would regroup and come
against them, asked their chiefs to seek peace. A treaty signed
at Fort Pitt thus ended Lord Dunmore's War and opened the lands
along the Ohio to settlement. |
1775 (March)
At a place known as Sycamore Shoals on the Watauga
River, Richard Henderson of North Carolina, head of the
Transylvania Land Company, purchases from the Cherokees for
$10,000 in guns and provisions "all the land enclosed in
the area bordered by the Appalachians to the east, the Ohio
River to the north, the Mississippi to the west and the
Cumberland River to the south." The Cherokees failed to
disclose, and Henderson did not ask, that this territory was
controlled not by the Cherokees but by the Shawnees. |
1775 (April 19)
Conflict between the colonials and the British
government erupts into armed rebellion at Concord and Lexington.
George Washington is appointed commander of the Continental
Army. |
1775 (May)
At a meeting called by Colonel Guy Johnson and Sir
John Johnson at Johnson Hall, on the Mohawk River, some 500
Loyalists formally oppose the measures adopted by the Congress
assembled in Philadelphia. |
1775 (May 10)
American' forces under General Benedict Arnold
and Colonel Ethan Allen capture Fort Ticonderoga on Lake
Champlain. |
1775 (June)
George Washington formally takes command of the
Continental Army and begins to plan a campaign against the
British. |
1775 (June 12)
Colonels Guy Johnson and John Butler meet in council
with the Iroquois chiefs to urge them to join the Loyalist
cause. |
1775 (June 17)
The British suffer defeat at the Battle of Bunker
Hill outside of Boston, in Massachusetts. |
1775 (July)
The Shawnee septs divide, with more than half the
population leaving the Ohio River region to move across the
Mississippi and permanently (they hope) away from the whites. |
1775 (August)
Major General Philip Schuyler, commander of the
Northern Department of the Contintental Amry, invites the Indians'
to a council at Albany. Virtually none of the major chiefs came;
the Iroquois were mostly in Montreal meeting with the British.
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1775 (September)
A force commanded by Ethan Allen attempts to take
Montreal by surprise but is forced to retreat. Allen is
captured. |
1775 (November 2)
The British surrender Fort St. Johns to the Americans'
under General Richard Montgomery. Montgomery then marches
against Montreal. Benedict Arnold at the same time appears on
the St. Lawrence across from Quebec. |
1775 (November 11)
Colonel Guy Johnson, accompanied by Thayendanegea,
departs North America from Quebec for England on a mission to
obtain increased support for the Loyalist cause. |
1776 (January)
Thomas Paine's Common Sense is published, in
which Paine declares: "The time has come for the final
separation from England and arms must decide the contest."
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1776 (January 7)
Continental troops under General Schuyler surround
Fort Johnson, the home of Sir John Johnson. Johnson is taken
prisoner, as are all the known Loyalists of the Mohawk Valley,
and their property confiscated. |
1776 (March)
General John Burgoyne takes command of a large
reinforcement of British troops headed for North America to
relieve Quebec and retake Montreal. Burgoyne is successful in
both objectives. |
1776 (June)
At the Continental Congress in Philadelphia, Richard
Henry Lee of Virginia introduces the following resolution: "Resolved:
that these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free
and independent states." A committee headed by Thomas
Jefferson is assigned to prepare a declaration of independence.
On July 4, 1776, the Declaration of Independence is signed. As
an inducement to citizens to join in the cause and fight for the
Continental Army, the Ohio River lands are made part of a new
Northwest Territory to be distributed on liberal terms following
victory against England. |
1776 (July)
Simon Kenton begins an extensive exploration of the
Can-tuc-kee country, making "tomahawk claims" to
tracts of land he finds particularly attractive. He reaches
Boonesboro and develops a strong friendship with Daniel Boone,
who is now in his mid-forties. |
1776 (September 23)
Sir John Johnson reaches Montreal and is commissioned
a colonel in the British army and placed in command of the New
York and other Loyalists. |
1776 (December 6)
The Virginia General Assembly declares the
Transylvania Land Company and its puchase of land from the
Cherokees illegal. Out of the Can-tuc-kee lands was created
Kentucky County. |
1776 (December)
Following his return from England, Thayendanegea
moves into the village of Oquaga, a village on the upper
Susquehanna of some three hundred Senecas, Cayugas, Mohawks,
Onondagas, Oneidas, Tuscaroras, a few Delawares and a dozen for
so Tory families. |
1777 (April)
The Shawnees attack Boonesboro. Daniel Boone, drawn
out of the fort, is seriously wounded and almost killed. He is
rescued by Simon Kenton, who carries Boone across his shoulders
back to the fort. The Shawnees keep up their pressure on
Boonesboro until late May, when they return across the Ohio. |
1777 (June 1)
General Burgoyne's force of 10,000 troops begins
moving out of Montreal toward Lake Champlain. The plan iss to
meet on the Hudson with Barry St. Leger (whose own force
included 700-900 Indians' commanded by Sir John Johnson)
as well as a large army under General William Howe coming from
New York City.
Burgoyne's army marches south toward Albany, chasing the Americans'
under General Schuyler from Fort Edward. |
1777 (August 2)
St. Leger's army opens an attack on Fort Stanwix,
garrisoned by 900 Americans'. A relief force is ambushed
by Thayendanegea and Sir John Johnson at the Battle of Oriskany.
Some 500 Americans' are killed; the Indians' suffer
around 100 killed and another 100 Tories are killed. |
1777 (August 15)
General Schuyler, dispatches a relief column under
Benedict Arnold to Fort Stanwix. Schuyler then moves his main
force closer to Albany. There he is met by General Horatio Gates
with orders from George Washington to take over command from
Schuyler. |
1777 (August 22)
Tired of the long siege against Fort Stanwix, the
Iroquois prepare to leave. St. Leger now has no choice but to do
so as well. Weakened after the long march south from Lake
Champlain, in September Burgoyne is surprised by a large
Continental force and meets defeat at the Battle of Saratoga. |
1777 (October 10)
Hokolesqua (Cornstalk to the whites), principal
Shawnee chief, ventures under a flag of truce to Fort Randolph,
to discuss the many violatons of the treaty of Fort Pitt. He and
his son Elinipsico are put into the stockade and promptly
murdered. |
1778 (February 6)
A formal treaty is signed between France and the
United States. France is now in the war against Britain. |
1778 (February)
Daniel Boone, leading a group of saltmakers, is
captured by a war party of Shawnees led by Blue Jacket. Boone is
taken to the Shawnee village of Chillicothe and, because of his
reputation and status as a frontiersman, is adopted into the
tribe rather than tortured to death. |
1778 (March)
Disgusted by the land greed and treachery of his
fellow colonials, Simon Girty changes sides and joins the Tories
fighting on behalf of the British empire. |
1778 (May)
A force of some 400 Rangers and Tories under Colonel
John Butler, supported by Senecas and Cayugas, swarm down the
Mohawk Valley as well as down the Susquehanna across northern
Pennsylvania. Many settlers are forced to abandon their cabins
and farms; those who do not often pay the ultimate price for
their folly. |
1778 (August)
George Rogers Clark surprises the British garrisons
at Forts Kaskaskia and Cahokia. During that month, Daniel Boone
also escapes from the Shawnees and returns to Boonesboro. |
1778 (September 13)
Simon Kenton, attempting to retrieve horses from the
Shawnees at Chillicothe, is captured and his companion, Alex
Montgomery, killed. Recognized, Simon is taken into captivity,
beaten, then forced to run a gauntlet at Chllicothe. Forced to
run twice, the second time he is hit with clubs and beaten until
he is unconscious. A tribal council condemns him to death at the
stake, at Wapatomica, the most central Shawnee village, where
the majority of the nation could be on hand for the execution.
Over the course of a week, Kenton is forced to run five more
gauntlets. Facing his sixth gauntlet at Moluntha's Town, he
decides to make his escape. While the Shawnees assemble in line,
he breaks through and before they can react he is 70 yards out
of the village. He outdistances his pursuers and is almost away,
when he runs directly into a group of oncoming braves led by
Blue Jacket, who sets off after him on horseback. Blue Jacket
brings him down with the blunt end of his tomahawk and Kenton is
dragged back to the village.
Kenton's head wound is dressed and his injuries treated.
Despite all that he endures, at another council his death
sentenced is reaffirmed. Twice more he is forced to run
gauntlets. Then, at Wapatomica, Simon Kirty arrives and
intervenes to save Kenton's life. A vote is taken and Kenton
receives a reprieve; in fact, this time the decision is that he
be adopted into the Shawnee nation. For a time, his survival
seems reasonably certain. |
The next section covers the
years of conflict created by European-American expansion
across the Appalachian Mountain chain, which was opening to
settlment despite the continued conflict with the British. The
struggle moves to the Ohio River and its tributaries.
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PART 4 []
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