
Avocations
Lewis Wetzel
He was the fourth of seven
children born to Mary Bonnet and John Wetzel. John Wetzel was a German
Palatinate emigrant who had survived indentured servitude and had
become successful enough to win the hand of Captain Bonnet's daughter
in marriage. Lewis' mother was of the Bonnet family, Flemish Huguenots
already several generations in American and very respected in Herford
Township, Pennsylvania.
After marrying in 1756, his parents moved from Pennsylvania to
Rockingham County, Virginia, where they stayed for several years. From
there they moved to Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, where Lewis was
born in 1763. In 1764, the growing Wetzel family, along with some of
the Bonnets, the Zanes, the Eberlys and the Rosencranzes, moved across
the Alleghenies to occupy some of the "free land" that had become
available in 1768 after the first Treaty of Fort Stanwix.
Ultimately, the little group
of
families settled near present day Wheeling, West Virginia. The Wetzels
carved a farmstead out of the forest along Big Wheeling Creek, about
fourteen miles from the Ohio River, converging from the Southeast.
The Wheeling Creek settlement was right on the edge of King George's
Proclamation Line of 1763, as it had been redrawn at the conference
held at Fort Stanwix in 1768. That was where the Iroquois got back at their enemies to the west by
granting to the British all Shawnee, Miami and Delaware lands east and
south of the Ohio as far downstream as the mouth of the Kanawha. The
Ohio Indians had neither participated in nor agreed to this disposition
of land and, as a result, the Wheeling Creek settlers were
frequent targets of Ohio country Indian attacks from about 1770 until
1795, when the Treaty of Greenville moved the boundary far
to the north.
Indians captured Lewis from his home on Wheeling Creek when he was
thirteen. It was 1777, the second year of the Revolutionary War. The
Wetzels, along with most of their neighbors, were holed up at nearby
Fort Henry waiting out that season's spate of Indian raids.
Wyandot raiders captured Lewis and his younger brother Jacob as they
were working with their father and their older brother George. Their
father and brother had, uncharacteristically, left their guns back in
the cabin when they had all gone out to the fields that morning to hoe
crops. Their father, John Wetzel, was a dedicated farmer for that place
and time. Most 18th century frontiersmen were really commercial hunters
and trappers, not farmers. Whatever farming got done, the women and
children did. The Wetzel place was an exception.
About midmorning, John Wetzel sent
the two younger boys back to the cabin to check on some venison that
was drying by the fire and to bring his and George's guns back out with
them. The Indians hit when they were coming out of the cabin to return
to the field. As Lewis opened the door and stepped out, they fired a
volley, grazing him across the chest and causing considerable pain and
blood loss. The Indians then charged in and captured the boys. Quickly
they scooped up some metal pots and the guns the boys were taking out
to the field. They then hurried off into the forest, pushing the boys
ahead of them. Their father and their brother George realized very
quickly what was going on, but could do nothing without weapons. They
saw that the boys were being taken captive and decided to run to the
fort for weapons and help. By the time they returned, the trail had
gotten very cold and they lost it. They could only hope that the boys
could get themselves out of this dilemma.
Indians often kidnapped their enemies. Sometimes, after testing their
strength, courage and stamina, they'd very ceremoniously adopt these
captives into their own families. Indians believed in the power of
transmutation, where, through elaborate preparation and ceremony,
adopted captives would replace and take on the character of lost
relatives. Surprising numbers of adopted whites were profoundly
transformed by this process and remained very attached to their Indian
families. This was especially so when the captives were young.
Other times, though, once they got the captives to their towns, They
might run them through the gauntlet until they were beaten to death, or
they might to burn them at the stake or otherwise torture them to
death. You couldn't tell what they'd do, especially with men and older
boys.
The shot that grazed Lewis across the chest tore away part of his
sternum. It was very painful, but he didn't dare let it slow him down.
If he faltered, he was dead.
On the third night, the Indians relaxed their guard enough that the
boys were able to escape. The night watch was asleep. The Indians
thought the boys were too far from home to try to run off. Besides,
they had taken away the boys' shoes to discourage them further from
running away.
Once out of camp and away, the boys paused to think out the best plan
of action. They had to stay off the trails or they would surely be
recaptured. That meant rough going through the forest over all sorts of
obstacles. There was no getting around it; they needed footwear.
So, after telling his little brother to lay low and not wander off,
Lewis stole back into the camp and got moccasins for both of them from
where they were drying by the fire. Then, figuring that his luck would
hold, he went back still another time and stole back his father's rifle
and powder horn. Then they took off through the forest for home.
They eluded recapture three times and crossed the Ohio to an island in
midriver on a raft they made of logs and strips of bark. Lewis' wound
was bothering him and, without his brother's help, he surely would not
have made it. Some boys from the Wheeling settlement were fishing on
the island. They helped them the rest of the way home. Their family and
friends welcomed them as if they had returned from the dead. This
experience focused Lewis's concentration for the rest of his life.
From then on, Lewis spent every spare moment perfecting himself as a
forest warrior. His father had given him a good start in this direction
years earlier; John Wetzel knew very clearly what both men and women
had to know to survive on the frontier and he did his utmost to see
that all his seven children, both sons and daughters knew frontier
skills very well. Lewis practiced shooting the long rifle until, legend
says, if the target was big enough for him to see, he could hit it
first shot. He became expert at using the knife and tomahawk. He was so
quick and agile that, in the forest at least, nobody could catch him.
On top of this, with help from his father, he learned to load, prime
and shoot his long rifle while running full speed through the woods; an
amazing achievement.
His first real opportunity to use these skills came one year later when
he was fourteen. That was when he participated in the rescue of Rose
Forrest. He was already about as tall as he was going to be and he had
become a superb hunter. That day his father had sent him out to warn a
neighboring family of hostile Indians in the vicinity when he crossed
paths with Frazier Forrest, who was out hunting small game and was
about to return home. Frazier was newly married and did not want to
leave his wife alone for too long. The Forrest cabin lay in the same
direction Lewis was going, so they decided to keep each other company
on the return trip. When they arrived at the Forrest cabin, it was
burning fiercely, and Frazier's wife, Rose was nowhere around. Frazier
was incoherent with rage and fear for her. Lewis read the sign and
concluded that four Indians, all on foot, had taken Rose away with
them. The two immediately began tracking them, intent on rescuing her.
The Indians lost much of their lead when they had to make a raft to
cross the Ohio. If the two young men could get across quickly
themselves, their chances of catching up with them before dark would be
good. They quickly made a small raft for their guns, powderhorns and
pouches and pushed it and its load ahead of them as the swam across the
river.
Once across, they found the Indians' raft abandoned and where their
trail resumed. As darkness descended and they were about to give up for
the night rather than lose the trail completely, they smelled smoke, as
coming from a campfire.
Investigating, they found the camp of the Indians they had been
following. Rose was alive, huddled against a tree. Even from this
distance they could hear her occasional sobbing. Three of the Indians
were asleep; the fourth was sitting up, his back against a tree.
Frazier's rage returned more powerfully than before. He was all for
firing at them right now and charging into their camp to finish them
off with tomahawk and knife. Lewis put a hand on his shoulder. "Wait
'til dawn. Less chance of them killing Rose if we get them when they're
just waking up".
They watched all night. Rose eventually fell asleep. The Indians
changed guard and fed the fire twice during that time. It was during a
guard change that the frontiersmen saw that one of the Indians was
really a white renegade. Dawn came. Lewis and Frazier waited for the
men to roust themselves. Their plan was to shoot the first two to get
on their feet, Frazier taking the man on the left, Lewis the one on the
right.
The white renegade rose first. Then the guard stood up. The
frontiersmen shot together just like they planned it and both of their
victims went down. Lewis and Frazier pulled their tomahawks and ran
yelling toward the fire. The other Indians sprang to their feet and ran
leaving their guns on the ground.
Frazier ran to Rose to comfort her. She was nearly hysterical. Lewis
continued in pursuit. Suddenly he saw that the two Indians had stopped
and were watching him. Both had tomahawks in their hands and looked as
if they were ready to charge him. Lewis stopped, raised his rifle and
shot one down. The other immediately charged knowing the frontiersman's
gun to be empty. Lewis fled, reloading as he ran. A short distance and
time later, with the Indian closing on him quickly, Lewis turned
around, took aim and shot his second victim.
They took four scalps, all the weapons, and returned to the river. They
used the Indians' raft to recross and went home.
In the middle of the next century, the author Emerson Bennett turned
this incident into a novel titled The Forest Rose.
His next individual battle with Indians happened two years later, when
he was sixteen. A group of frontiersmen from further east passed by a
field on the Wetzel home place where Lewis was working. They were
chasing Indians who had stolen some of their horses. It didn't take
much to persuade Lewis to join them. It looked a lot more interesting
than hoeing corn.
After tracking the raiders all day, the settlers caught them resting in
a small meadow at a spring near today's St. Clairsville, Ohio. Once
again, the Indians, there were three of them, thought they were far
enough into their own territory to let down their guard. Totally
surprised, they abandoned their plunder and disappeared into the
surrounding forest. The frontiersmen simply took back their horses.
Just as suddenly, though, the Indians reappeared and stole some of the
frontiersmen's horses again, including the one Lewis had ridden during
the chase; his father's favorite mare. Vowing not to return to Wheeling
Creek without his father's horse, Lewis persuaded two other members of
the party to join him and resumed pursuit. The rest decided that they'd
had enough of chasing Indians and turned back.
Later that day, Lewis and his companions caught up with the Indians
once again. Lewis and the Indians "treed" — they hid behind
trees
and began plotting ways to get at each other. Lewis's two companions
both simultaneously decided that they, like their friends, also had had
enough of chasing Indians. They ran, leaving Lewis to his fate.
Lewis drew their fire by sticking his hat out from behind his tree on
his ramrod. After they shot, Lewis fell into the tall grass near his
tree, clutching his chest. The Indians were so sure they'd hit him that
they raced each other to be the first to count coup and get his scalp.
He stood up and shot the first one. Then he ran off through the forest,
reloading as he went. Thinking his rifle unloaded, the remaining two
were hot on his heels when he turned and shot the second one. The third
decided to quit while he was still able to and disappeared into the
forest.
A few days later Lewis appeared at Wheeling Creek showing two scalps
around and telling his story to anyone who would listen. He was
proclaimed a hero.
From then on Lewis Wetzel lived primarily as an Indian hunter. He never
"settled down." He never took up land, built a cabin of his own,
farmed, or did any other sort of usual work. There's no real record of
him ever forming a permanent relationship with a woman.
They said he was a good fiddle player who was always welcome in taverns
and at dances. He got along well with dogs and children, but not so
much so with adults. He did not speak very well and seemed strange and
unstable. He would appear fairly often on a Sunday afternoon when there
was a competition of frontier skills; shooting, running, tomahawk
throwing, and so forth. When he did show up, he always won.
Mainly he roamed the forests across in the Ohio country hunting Indians
and carrying out one man raids. He would spend weeks at a time moving
secretly deep in the forests north of the Ohio. One of his favorite
strategies was to trail small Indian hunting parties. He'd wait until
they made camp and settled in for the night. After they were well
asleep he would descend upon them with knife and tomahawk, killing as
many as he could before they were awake enough to resist. He wiped out
parties of two or three several times this way.
He also would hunt out and provision hideouts, often caves or narrow
deep ravines, where he could go to ground for days or even weeks at a
time if he had to. One of his hiding places, little more than a cliff
overhang, really, is located in a city park in today's Lancaster, Ohio. (Near to where we were searching)
Between 1779 and 1788 he collected the scalps of twenty seven
Indians that he said he personally killed. Accounts of his exploits as
told by others put the total at more than one hundred.
In 1781, he killed an Indian before large numbers of witnesses for the
first time. It was during the American Colonel Daniel Brodhead's
disastrous campaign against the Delaware in the upper Muskingum area,
The Delaware had recently abandoned a position of neutrality and had
sided with the British, albeit somewhat tentatively. Colonel Brodhead,
with 150 soldiers from his garrison at Pittsburgh and 134 militia,
managed to surprise and burn the nearby Delaware town of Coshocton.
This success was blunted by the militia's deliberate killing of fifteen
Delaware warriors after they had surrendered. This led to the Delaware
burning nine captured Kentuckians on nine Consecutive days. Thanks to
his militia contingent's activities, the main result of Brodhead's
campaign was to firm up Delaware hostility. After Coshocton, they
rivaled the Shawnees in their hostility toward Americans.
Wetzel's victim was a Delaware Chief acting as a peace emissary. The
chief had been invited to the Americans' camp under a safe conduct and
had just gotten out of his canoe when Wetzel tomahawked him from
behind. Militiamen learning of this approved of Wetzel's action so
boisterously that Brodhead chose to do nothing to punish him.
Sometimes Wetzel would go with others on expeditions into the forest.
Often this was to guide land speculators into areas they wanted to
claim before the crowds got there; that is, before the Indians had been
"removed".
It was much more difficult for a group traveling out into the
wilderness to escape notice than it was for Wetzel going it alone. The
chances of getting involved in pitched battle went up proportionately.
When there was a fight, Wetzel was always able to do more than account
for himself. His companions, though, were sometimes neither as capable
or lucky as he was. Indians killed John Madison, brother of future
president James Madison in the Spring of 1786 while he was traveling
with Wetzel on a land surveying expedition along the Little Kanawha
River in today's West Virginia.
As the years passed, Wetzel became more and more eccentric. He took to
wearing tassels in his split earlobes. His carefully tended hair, when
combed out, hung almost to his knees. He said he wanted to give his
enemies a scalp worth the effort it would take to get it. Indian
fighting became the sole focus of his life. People became even more
uncomfortable with him; they began to doubt his sanity.
His real troubles began when he murdered Tegunteh. Wetzel had agreed to
be the chief hunter for the new settlement of Marietta on the north
side of the river until the end of the year, 1788. General Josiah
Harmar, commander of the American army detachment stationed at nearby
Fort Harmar (shows where the General's ego led), knowing of Wetzel's
reputation and woodland skills, persuaded Wetzel to act as his scout on
any expeditions he would carry into the interior. Ironically, Fort
Harmar had been constructed and manned with American military to
protect the Delawares from incursions by Whites from south of the
River.
This is where he ambushed and murdered Tegunteh, a key Seneca leader
who had long worked with the Americans for peace. Wetzel murdered him
right in the middle of very sensitive negotiations leading to the
Treaty of Fort Harmar, completed in 1789. The Americans, represented by
Colonel Josiah Harmar, had worked for years to put over this treaty.
This treaty was the keystone of the new United States government's
Indian policy in the Northwest Territory.
One morning when Tegunteh left the Seneca encampment alone to go to
Fort Harmar for the day's negotiations, Wetzel stepped out onto the
trail in front of him and shot him, scalped him and left him for dying.
Wetzel's mistake was to not finish Tegunteh off. He lived long enough
to describe Wetzel, the tricolored hat he was then wearing, and the
grin he had on his face as he shot. He described him completely.
Wetzel, along with many others on the Frontier, hated Indians so
intensely that they believed that the only way to deal with them was to
exterminate them. Wetzel did everything in his power to prevent any
peaceful settlement between Whites and Indians from taking place. He
did not want peace until the last Indian was dead. Even though most
frontiersmen approved of Wetzel's motives, this ambush put him beyond
the pale as far as the American government was concerned. Colonel
Harmar posted him as wanted for murder and he became a fugitive.
An American regular army patrol captured him first time while he was
camped on an island in the Ohio near Fort Harmar and Marietta. It was
arrogance on his part that allowed that to happen. He thought they
never could catch him. He escaped wearing hand irons. The army was also
overconfident. He convinced his guards to remove his leg irons and
surround him so that he could go out onto the parade ground and get
some exercise. Once his ankles were free, he fled into the forest where
nobody could catch him. With help, he crossed the Ohio and, on the
other side, the first frontiersman he encountered filed and sawed his
hand irons off in his smithy. The frontier people did not share their
government's opinion of Wetzel. In fact, they weren't real sure that it
even was their government. Wetzel was one of them.
He was captured the second time in Limestone, Kentucky, now called
Maysville. Members of another regular Army group, wearing civilian
clothes as they traveled downriver to Fort Washington near what is now
Cincinnati recognized him. They took him with them to Fort Washington
where they locked him up for trial.
More than 200 frontiersmen, including such prominent people as Simon
Kenton, gathered outside the fort. They demanded Wetzel's release.
Otherwise they threatened to rescue him by force. Territorial judge
John Symmes resolved the dilemma by turning Wetzel out on a Writ of
Habeas Corpus. He never bothered to call him back for trial.
Despite Wetzel and his kind's efforts to prevent it, peace of a sort
finally did come to the Ohio country in 1795 with the Treaty of
Greenville. This agreement established a new boundary between Americans
and the Indian nations that ran far to the north of the Ohio River. The
menace of Indian attack virtually disappeared from the Ohio Valley and
Wetzel's star quickly faded. Like others of that time who did not
prosper after the wild frontier moved away from them, Wetzel went west
and south into Spanish territory. His name appears in the records of
Spanish New Orleans. He spent several years in prison there in the late
1790's. Romantics tell us that this was because he became involved with
the wife of a Spanish colonial officer. Other accounts state that he
was imprisoned because of his involvement with a counterfeiting ring.
In 1804, some say he was briefly recruited into the Lewis and Clark
Expedition as a hunter and scout. They also say that after three
months, he was either dismissed or left of his own accord. He
supposedly would not conform to the expedition's discipline
requirements. However, his name does not appear in any of the
expedition's very detailed log books or in any of the participants'
journals. This story probably belongs with the one about the Spanish
official's wife.
In 1805, his name reappears in the records as living with or near his
cousin Philip Sycks in the vicinity of Natchez, Mississippi. While
there, in 1808, he fell ill and died, probably from yellow fever. He
was just short of forty five years old.
As was then the custom in the South, he was buried in the front yard of
his cabin. His cousin's wife insisted that his rifle be buried with
him, saying that a gun that had killed as many as that one had would
haunt any house it was kept in.
In 1942, almost one hundred thirty five years later, Dr. Albert W.
Bowser came down from Chicago and hunted down Wetzel's unmarked grave.
First he located Philip Sycks' farm exactly through studying the local
court records. This brought him to the hamlet of Rosetta, near Natchez.
Once there, he interviewed elderly residents, mostly former slaves, who
led him to a grave in what had become a plowed field. Four feet down,
they found the skeleton of a man in his forties who was about five feet
nine inches tall. Rusted parts of a rifle were at his side. There were
also very long hair prints in the soil around the skeleton. They were
sure they had found Wetzel.
They exhumed the remains and placed them in a small black casket with
"LEWIS WETZEL" engraved in silver on the top. Dr. Bowser brought his
remains back to Moundsville, West Virginia, where they now rest beside
those of his oldest brother Martin, in the McCreary Cemetery, just two
miles from the old Wetzel homestead from where he started.
West Virginia has named a county and a state highway after him. He was
their greatest early frontiersman.
He did what he did very effectively. He was probably the best single
combat fighter America ever produced. His courage was
unquestioned. His sanity, yes; his courage, never. He made war on his
enemies using their own style of fighting. Early Americans living on
the Ohio River Frontier considered him an outstanding public servant.
To this day America, at least, is enjoying the fruits of
his labors. We must give credit where it is due.