Chapter 1 of 42 · 915 words · ~5 min read

CHAPTER I

Commencement of journey--Schuylkill bridge--Schuylkill river--Downingstown--Brandywine creek--Pequea creek--New Holland--Conestoga creek and bridge--Lancaster 25

CHAP. II

Elizabethtown--Susquehannah river--Harrisburgh 33

CHAP. III

Conestoga massacre--Carlisle and Dickinson college 42

CHAP. IV

Shippensburgh--Strasburgh--Horse valley 49

CHAP. V

Fannetsburgh--Juniata--Bloody run--Bedford 55

CHAP. VI

Allegheny mountains--Somerset--A murder 61

CHAP. VII

Laurel and Chesnut hills--Greensburgh--Pittsburgh 70

CHAP. VIII

Pittsburgh--Lawyers--Clergymen 76

CHAP. IX

Allegheny, Monongahela and Ohio rivers 87

CHAP. X

Georgetown--Little Beaver creek 100

CHAP. XI

Steubenville--Charlestown 106

CHAP. XII

Warren--Wheeling--Canton 111

CHAP. XIII

Little and Big Grave creeks--Monuments 114

CHAP. XIV

Muskingum--Marietta--Fortifications 120

CHAP. XV

Little Kenhawa--Blennerhasset’s island 126

CHAP. XVI

Little and Big Hockhocking--Belleville 130

CHAP. XVII

Le Tart’s falls--Graham’s station 135

CHAP. XVIII

Point Pleasant--Battle--Dunmore’s campaign 140

{iv} CHAP. XIX

Galliopolis--Green’s bottom--Hanging rock 147

CHAP. XX

Big Guiandot--Great Sandy--Snakes 153

CHAP. XXI

French Grant--Little Sciota--Portsmouth 156

CHAP. XXII

Sciota--Alexandria--Salt-works 161

CHAP. XXIII

Brush creek--Manchester--Maysville 165

CHAP. XXIV

Washington, K.--May’s and Blue licks--Salt furnaces 170

CHAP. XXV

Nicholasville--Millersburgh--Massacre 176

CHAP. XXVI

Lexington 181

CHAP. XXVII

Leesburgh--Frankfort 189

CHAP. XXVIII

Paris--Frank Bird--Hospitality 196

CHAP. XXIX

Commence a journey from Maysville through the state of Ohio to Pittsburgh 201

CHAP. XXX

Bainbridge--Arrival at Chilicothe 208

CHAP. XXXI

The Sciota--Chilicothe--Monuments 215

CHAP. XXXII

Hockhocking--New Lancaster--Zanesville 219

CHAP. XXXIII

Wills’s creek--Cambridge--Beymer’s 226

CHAP. XXXIV

St. Clairsville--Indian Wheeling 230

CHAP. XXXV

Little Wheeling--Alexandria or Hardscramble 234

CHAP. XXXVI

Washington, Penn.--Canonsburgh--Pittsburgh 238

CHAP. XXXVII

Pittsburgh--Panorama around it 242

CHAP. XXXVIII

Descends the Ohio again--Columbia, Newport, Cincinnati, Port Williams, Louisville, falls 255

{v} CHAP. XXXIX

Blue river--Horse machinery boat 261

CHAP. XL

Green river--Henderson--Cotton machine 265

CHAP. XLI

Wabash river, Shawanee town, Rocking cave 269

CHAP. XLII

Cumberland river, Tennessee, Fort Massac 273

CHAP. XLIII

Mississippi, New Madrid, Little Prairie 279

CHAP. XLIV

Indian warriours, their manners and customs 284

CHAP. XLV

Fort Pike, Chickasaw Indians, Fort Pickering 289

CHAP. XLVI

Settlements of Arkansas and White river 295

CHAP. XLVII

Grand lake, Anecdote of a Carolinean 300

CHAP. XLVIII

Walnut Hills, Fort M’Henry, Bayou Pierre 305

CHAP. XLIX

Commence a tour by land, Cole’s creek, Greenville 310

CHAP. L

Washington, Natchez, Mississippi territory 318

CHAP. LI

Homochito, Fort Adams, Pinkneyville 326

CHAP. LII

Enter West Florida, Thomson’s creek 331

CHAP. LIII

Baton Rouge, Spanish governour, Mrs. O’Brien’s 339

CHAP. LIV

Remarks on the climate, soil, manners, face of the country, productions, &c. 347

The description of the Mississippi continued from Bayou Pierre to New Orleans--Thence a sea voyage to Philadelphia, by another hand 354

PREFACE

The writer of the following tour would not trouble the reader with a Preface, did not some circumstances render it in a certain degree necessary.

It might be asked why he had not commenced the tour with a particular description of Philadelphia. His reasons for not doing so were, in the first place, Philadelphia is a city so minutely described in every modern geographical publication, that few readers are unacquainted with its local situation between the rivers Delaware and Schuylkill, its regularity of plan, its rapid progress, &c. Whereas the country through which the author travelled has been very little treated of by tourists, of course is little known to strangers; though an account of its appearance, its natural properties, its improvements, and the manners of its mixed population, perhaps merits a place on the shelves of the literati, as much as the numerous tours and travels through Europe, Asia and Africa with which they are loaded. Indeed, in one point of view, such a book may be much more useful, as it may serve for a record of the situation of a country, in its infancy, which from its rapid improvement in a very few years, will form a wonderful contrast to its present state, while the trans-Atlantick travellers have to treat of countries either arrived at the highest state of improvement, or of others buried in the gloom of ignorance and barbarity, and of course both stationary, and therefore not affording any variety of consequence, during the two last centuries, (in which time they have been the theme of so many able pens) excepting the style of writing and manner of description.

In the second place--It was the author’s wish to condense as much into one cheap volume as he could make it contain, and had he entered into minute descriptions of places the best known, he would [have] had so much the less room for the original matter, with which he intended to constitute the bulk of the work.

It was intended to have put the work to the press in the winter of 1807, the year in which the tour commenced, but a series of disappointments essayed by the author, has unavoidably postponed it, and has given him an opportunity of adding to the original plan, some account of the lower parts of the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, and the countries washed by them, particularly the Mississippi territory, which has become of great importance to the United States, and is not without its value to Europe, from its immense supply of cotton to the European manufacturers.

{viii} As the intention of the author was the increase of information, he makes no apology for the plainness of his style, and he expects, on that account, to be spared any criticism. Should however any one think proper to bestow a leisure hour in the remarking of his inaccuracies, or the incorrectness of his language, he can have no possible objection, as criticism of that kind always tends to general improvement.

THE AUTHOR

Mississippi territory, 20th Oct. 1809.

SKETCHES OF A TOUR