Table of Contents List of Archives Top of Page
<< Page 1 >>

pay him for his tea, and provide him the command of a good ship, but this report gains no credit here.


Philadelphia, May 23, 1774.

By intelligence from Pittsburg of the 1st of May, we learn that about the 26th of April, as one Stephens, with two Indians, (a Shawanese and a Delaware,) were going down the Ohio in a canoe, (that had been a few days before robbed by three men and a woman of the Cherokee nation, after they had killed one white man, and wounded another,) he discovered a canoe with people near Whaling, coming up the river, which he suspected to be Indians, and strove to avoid them by making towards the opposite shore, when they were fired upon twice, and the two Indians in his canoe killed; but he could not perceive who it was that fired, as the enemy lay concealed in the bushes. He then threw himself into the river, and observed the canoe that was coming up to contain white men. He made towards it, and found therein Colonel Michael Cresap, and some other men, who pretended entire ignorance of his misfortune, although he, the said Stephens, declares, that, from several circumstances, he suspects the murder was committed by persons in confederacy with Cresap, as he heard him threaten to put every Indian to death he should meet with on the river; and that if he could get a number of men together sufficient for the undertaking, he was determined to mark a small Indian village on Yellow Creek.

We also learn, that Major Macdonald, of Virginia, on his return to Pittsburg from the Big Runaway, gives account that a skirmish had happened between some Virginians and Indians, in which some were killed on both sides, which had occasioned the surveyors and grantees of land from that Colony to return; and that on his way to Pittsburg, on the 27th of April, he stopped at the house of Colonel Cresap, near Whaling, where one Mahon came and informed that fourteen Indians, in five canoes, had called at his house going down the river, and asked him for provisions, which he refused, telling them that two of their brethren, the day before, had been killed by the white people, which these Indians heard nothing of before, and proceeded down the river. That, upon this news, Cresap collected fifteen men, followed and overtook them at the mouth of a small creek, where they had hauled up the canoes, and were waiting with expectation of being attacked as a consequence of what they had heard. That Cresap, spying the canoes, fired among them, upon which a skirmish ensued: and the Indians retired after the loss of one man on each side, and left in the canoes sixteen kegs of rum, and some saddles and bridles.

Captain Crawford, and Mr. Neville, of Virginia, from Pittsburg, informed, that about the 3d instant, in their way there, they met a number of the inhabitants moving off their places, and with them a party who produced several Indian scalps, and said they got them as follows: "That a number of Indians encamped at the mouth of Yellow Creek, opposite to which two men named Greathouse and Baker, with some others, had assembled themselves, at a house belonging to the said Baker, and invited two men and two women of the Indians over the creek to drink with them, when, after making them drunk, they killed and scalped them; and two more Indian men then came over, who met with the like fate. After which six of their men came over to seek their friends, and on approaching the bank where the white men lay concealed, perceived them, and endeavoured to retreat back, but received a fire from the shore, which killed two Indians, who fell in the river; two fell dead in the canoe, and a fifth was so badly wounded that he could hardly crawl up the bank." Among the unfortunate sufferers was an Indian woman, wife to a white man, one of the traders; and she had an infant at her breast, which these inhuman butchers providentially spared and took with them. Mr. Neville asked the man who had the infant if he was not near enough to have taken its mother prisoner without killing her? He replied, that he was about six feet from her when he shot her exactly in the forehead, and cut the hoppase with which the child's cradle hung at her back; and he thought to have knocked out its brains, but remorse prevented him, on seeing the child fall with its mother. This party further informed them, that after they had killed these Indians they ran off with their families, and that they thought the whole country was fled, as Cresap, who was the perpetrator of the first offence, was then also on his way to Redstone.


Address of the Episcopal Ministers and Wardens in BOSTON, to Governour HUTCHINSON, presented MONDAY, MAY 23, 1774, at the Castle.

SIR: The Ministers of the Episcopal Churches in Boston, and the neighbouring towns, with as many of the Wardens, as could conveniently attend, hearing of your intention to embark in a short time for England, beg leave to express our unfeigned gratitude for your generous attention, and unwearied application to the important interests of this Province, in which your wisdom and integrity have been equally conspicuous. If any of our fellow-citizens have viewed your administration in a less favourable light, we are persuaded it must be owing to some misapprehension of your Excellency's intentions. But that which falls more immediately within our province, is the regard you have always paid to the interests of religion, and the favourable notice you have taken of the Church of England within your Government. Be pleased, sir, to accept this sincere testimony of our respect and gratitude, together with our earnest prayers that the divine blessing may attend you through the remaining stages of your life, and reward you with an eternity of happiness in the life to come.

To which his EXCELLENCY was pleased to return the following Answer:

GENTLEMEN: Whatever favourable notice I may have taken of the Church of England, the grateful return you have made in this mark of respect, is alone an ample reward, and will be an additional inducement to me, in whatever station I may be the remaining part of my life, sincerely to wish your prosperity, and to contribute every thing in my power to the advancement of the interest of religion among you.


Address of the Justices, of the Court of General Sessions of the Peace, for the County of SUFFOLK, in MASSACHUSETTS, to his Excellency Governour GAGE. Presented on TUESDAY, MAY 24, 1774.

Province of MASSACHUSETTS BAY:

To his Excellency the Honourable THOMAS GAGE, Esq., Governour, Commander-in-chief, and Vice Admiral of said Province, and Lieutenant General of his Majesty's Forces in NORTH AMERICA:

SIR: The Justices of his Majesty's Court of General Sessions of the Peace for the county of Suffolk, are happy in having an opportunity before the close of the present term, at once to testify their loyalty to the King, and to pay your Excellency their dutiful respects, on your advancement to the Chair of Government in this Province.

The appointment of a gentleman of your Excellency's eminence and character, we esteem as a mark of the royal favour; we flatter ourselves that it will be acceptable to the people over whom you preside, as it may afford them encouragement that the powers with which you are invested, will invariably be applied to the promotion of their peace and prosperity, and thereby they may lose the remembrance of their former troubles.

We are sensible that the cares of Government are at all times burthensome, and more peculiarly so when increased by any public dissentions. We therefore wish your Excellency that wisdom which is from above, to direct you in every department both of office and duty, and that under your auspices the people of your charge may ever enjoy the benefits resulting from a just and due execution of the laws, even security to their persons and property, and the happiness of British subjects.

The administration of justice, we consider as the principal duty of Kings; in this view, conformable to our duty, we would tender to your Excellency the earliest assurances that the Executive powers wherewith we are intrusted, by our commission, shall in all respects be employed for the preservation of the peace and good order of this county; and that both as citizens and Magistrates, we will afford

Table of Contents List of Archives Top of Page
<< Page 1 >>