Clark's group arrives to Zanesburg to find …
Years: 1774 - 1774
April
Clark's group arrives to Zanesburg to find the whole area in an uproar.
People are panicked by the stories of the survivors of the native attacks.
They are upset by what they view as native savagery.
Fearing for the lives of women and children, the British colonists from the frontier flock to the tiny town for protection.
Cresap's group is swelled with volunteers spoiling for a fight.
Word of the group's arrival and plans have now reached Fort Pitt and Captain John Connolly, the garrison commander, sends a message asking that the volunteers remain in Zanesburg a few days.
He has sent messages to the local tribes to determine their intentions.
A flurry of correspondence results, first, with the group saying they will wait for further word from Connolly.
Before their message reaches Fort Pitt, Cresap receives a second message from Connolly that says the Shawnee-Ohio tribes have signaled they intend war.
Cresap calls a council on April 26.
After he reads Connolly's letter aloud, the assembly declares war against the natives.
After spotting some native canoes on the river the next day, settlers chase them fifteen miles (twenty-four kilometers) downriver to Pipe Creek.
There settlers engage them in battle, with a few casualties on each side.
The following day, Clark's party abandons the original idea of proceeding to Kentucky.
Expecting retaliation, they break camp and move with Cresap's men to his headquarters at Redstone Old Fort.
People are panicked by the stories of the survivors of the native attacks.
They are upset by what they view as native savagery.
Fearing for the lives of women and children, the British colonists from the frontier flock to the tiny town for protection.
Cresap's group is swelled with volunteers spoiling for a fight.
Word of the group's arrival and plans have now reached Fort Pitt and Captain John Connolly, the garrison commander, sends a message asking that the volunteers remain in Zanesburg a few days.
He has sent messages to the local tribes to determine their intentions.
A flurry of correspondence results, first, with the group saying they will wait for further word from Connolly.
Before their message reaches Fort Pitt, Cresap receives a second message from Connolly that says the Shawnee-Ohio tribes have signaled they intend war.
Cresap calls a council on April 26.
After he reads Connolly's letter aloud, the assembly declares war against the natives.
After spotting some native canoes on the river the next day, settlers chase them fifteen miles (twenty-four kilometers) downriver to Pipe Creek.
There settlers engage them in battle, with a few casualties on each side.
The following day, Clark's party abandons the original idea of proceeding to Kentucky.
Expecting retaliation, they break camp and move with Cresap's men to his headquarters at Redstone Old Fort.
Locations
People
Groups
- Shawnees, or Shawanos (Amerind tribe)
- Ohio Country
- Thirteen Colonies, The
- Virginia (English Crown Colony)
- Mingo (Seneca-Cayuga Tribe of Oklahoma)
