OCR Text |
Show MOONEY] ATTACK ON BUCHANAN^ STATION- 1792 73 KXOXVILLE, Septemlter 11, 1792. SIR: YOU are hereby commanded to repair with your company to Knoxville, equipped, to protect the frontiers; there is imminent danger. Bring with you two days* provisions, if possible; but you are not to delay an hour on that head. I am, sir, yours, JAMES WHITE. 1 About midnight on the 30th of September, 1792, the Indian force, consisting of several hundred Chickamaugas and other Cherokee, Creeks, and Shawano, attacked Buchanan's station, a few miles south of Nashville. Although numbers of families had collected inside the stockade for safety, there were less than twenty able- bodied men among them. The approach of the enemy alarmed the cattle, by which the garrison had warning just in time to close the gate when the Indians were already within a few yards of the entrance. The assault was furious and determined, the Indians rushing up to the stockade, attempting to set fire to it, and aiming their guns through the port holes. One Indian succeeded in climbing upon the roof with a lighted torch, but was shot and fell to the ground, holding his torch against the logs as he drew his last breath. It was learned afterward that he was a half blood, the stepson of the old white trader who had once rescued the boy Joseph Brown at Nickajack. He was a desperate warrior and when only twenty- two years of age had already taken six white scalps. The attack was repulsed at every point, and the assailants finally drew off, with considerable loss, carrying their dead and wounded with them, and leaving a number of hatchets, pipes, and other spoils upon the ground. Among the wounded was the chief John Watts. Not one of those in the fort was injured. It has been well said that the defense of Buchanan's station by such a handful of men against an attacking force estimated all the way at from three to seven hundred Indians is a feat of bravery which has scarcely been surpassed in the annals of border warfare. The effect upon the Indians must have been thoroughly disheartening. 8 In the same month arrangements were made for protecting the frontier along the French Broad by means of a series of garrisoned blockhouses, with scouts to patrol regularly from one to another, North Carolina cooperating on her side of the line. The hostile inroads still continued in this section, the Creeks acting with the hostile Cherokee. One raiding party of Creeks having been traced toward Chilhowee town on Little Tennessee, the whites were about to burn that and a neighboring Cherokee town when Sevier interposed and prevented. 8 There is no reason to suppose that the people of these towns were directly concerned in the depredations along the frontier at this period, 1 Ramsey, Tennessee, pp. 662- 565,1853. * Blount, letter, October 2,1792, in American State Papers: Indian Affairs, I, p. 294,1832; Blount, letter, etc., in Ramsey, op. c i t , pp. 566,567,599- 601; see also Brown's narratiTe, ibid., 511,512; Royce, Cherokee Nation, Filth Ann. Rep. Bureau of Ethnology, p. 170,1888. ' Ramsey, op. cit. 569- 571. |