Interviews
With Early Settlers
"He’s So Nice the Indians Wouldn’t Hurt Him
Spencer was
taken the summer before we came. His mother
had a nephew living with her and Mrs. Spencer said she was glad it was her
son that was taken for she knew he was so good natured they wouldn’t hurt him.
("Taken" was a term referring to individuals being "taken" or kidnapped by the Indians. Kidnapping was common on the frontier during early times. The mortality rate among Indian children made white children prize targets as "replacements."
Interview with James Beasley: (1794). He lived 15 miles east of Cincinnati near Milford, Ohio.
A Non-Fatal Gut Shot
Major Benjamin Stites & Nathaniel Reeder were going down to Cincinnati from Columbia. They were fired on by perhaps a party of 30 Indians. Stites when he saw the Indians raising out of a hollow dropped right down on his horse and hear the bullets go over him. Stites got in first and the two soldiers ere coming out of the fort, when they met Reeder, whom they supposed to be killed. Reeder had been shot right in front of the abdomen, but so the bullet passed in and came out without hurting a vessel.
Isaac Beasley lived about 5 miles up the Little Miami, west side. One night in the spring or summer of 1794 the Indians were around his house, he knew from the dogs barking. In the morning he got up and went back and forth till he could see if he saw anything of the yet moving so they couldn’t fire. As many as 7 or 8 guns were fired at him, all missing and he ran to the door. His wife hearing the guns supposed he was dead and was pushing it too but he prevented and got in and then got his gun and ran to the stairs to shoot. Here he was seen through the chink and was shot in the arm, the bullet entering above the wrist and coming out at the elbow. By the time his sons 7 or 8 were up and fired at the Indians who fled. One was supposed to be killed but never found. Beasleys was about ½ mile from Frazier’s Station where I lived.
Shot In The Leg and It Proved Fatal.
Hinkle’s. a company of 15 up to Covaltt’s
helping him build it. They were on horseback and were waylaid by a party of 40
Indians who fired on them, and killed two horses, Gabriel Hutchings shot down
under him and Hinkle’s who was wounded in the calf of the leg. When the horse fell Hinkle jumped to his feet
and ran till he got close to his door and he died in about an hour. A vein in the balf of his leg was cut. His door at at the Round Bottom , he ran 200
yards so near his home it was. There was
no station at Round Bottom only one or two houses there yet. The alarm was given but the Indians
discontinued the attack.
The fact Hinkle could run 200 yards with a bullet through his ankle is a testament to his stamina. Hinkle was related to Ensign Schillinger, the soldier who kept a journal at Fort Amanda in 1813
“I killed your father.”
Ephraim Covalt killed at his own station. He was out, supposed to
have been straggling. Covalt wore a pair
of silver sleeve buttons. About 3 years
after an Indian came along & asked his son if his name wasn’t Covalt. He said it was, “Me kill your father.” The Indian then said and showed him the
buttons. He had his father’s gun
too. Some blamed Covalt for letting him
go.
Olcott was shot through the shoulder. James Newell was killed, he had been thrown. Henry Ball was taken prisoner. The backwater was up very high,, they went up in a pirogue and brought him down the next morning, he was not yet dead. He was killed by Mrs. Ferris this side the middle gate.
"He was killed by Mrs. Ferris"? Was it an accident on purpose?? We may never know.
Readmore's Hallmark stores in Lima, Ohio (E. Elm st., Eastgate and Flanders ave.
If you're looking for a speaker related to this subject for your group, simply email me at djohnson43@att.net or call H: 740-879-4502 or C: 614-747-3082. If no one answers leave a message.
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