^^--^ «p- • O H O 'o . n .0* ^"^ 'o . ^ m ..^^r^^ .<^^ <*. . A.^ -^^ °X ^ V' ^^. • ^ °o ^ .V' -^ -A ^ '^^ ^^ -.' / > * "/ .r»^ ' % ^^ *V a\ 'S -> v^ .^^ o > • '■> . » Lyman Copeland Draper A MEMOIR By REUBEN GOLD THWAITES Secretary of the State Hisiorical Socikty OF Wisconsin [Reprinted from Vol. XI L, Wisconsin IlisloiiidI Collections \ MADISON, WISCONSIN DEMOCRAT PRINTING COMPANY, STATE PRINTERS 1893 •„;■'», >r ■•■■'\!f*.-. Lyman Copeland Draper A MEMOIR By REUBEN GOLD THWAITES Secretary of the State Historical Society OF Wisconsin I Reprinted from Vol. XII., Wisconsin Historical Collections \ MADISON, WISCONSIN DEMOCRAT PRINTING COMPANY, STATE PRINTERS 1892 2 WISCONSIN HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS. [vol.xii. father, Luke, was twice captured by the English during the same war. When Lyman was three years of age, the fam- ily removed to Lockport, on the Erie canal. Luke Draper was by turns grocer, tavern-keeper and farmer, and as soon as his son Lyman could be of use about the house, the store or the land, he was obliged to do his full share of family labor. Up to the age of fifteen, the boy's experiences were those of the average village lad of the period — the almost continuous performance of miscel- laneous duties, including family shoe repairing, the gather- ing and selling of wild berries and occasional jobs for the neighbors. One summer was spent in acting as a hod-car- rier for a builder in the village, at the wage of twelve and one-half cents per day. From his fifteenth year to his eighteenth, he served as clerk in various village shops. During this time, after having gained all the education possible from the village school, he added to its meager curriculum the reading of what few books were obtainable by purchase or borrowing in the then frontier settlement, and established something of a local reputation as a youth of letters. Even at that early age the lad's taste for Revolutionary lore was well developed. He came naturally by it. At Luke Draper's family fireside, the deeds of Revolutionary heroes always formed the chief topic of conversation. There were yet living many veterans of the Conti- nental army, who were always welcome to the hos- pitality of the Draper household, while the war of 18i"-^-15 was an event of but a few years previous. The boy was early steeped in knowledge of the facts and traditions of Anglo-American fights and western border forays, so that it was in after years impossible for him to remember when he first became inspired with the passion for obtaining in- formation as to the events in which his ancestors took part. As a boy he never neglected an opportunity to see and converse with distinguished pioneers and patriots. In 1825, when but ten jears of age, he feasted his eyes upon La Fayette, during the latter's celebrated visit to the United 1833-34-] LYMAN COPELAND DRAPER. 3 States; and to the last declared he had a vivid recollection of the lineaments of that noble friend of the Revolutionary cause. Lewis Cass, DeWitt Clinton, and other celebrities of that day, he also saw and heard at Lockport, while the' presence in the village, on various occasions, of the noted Seneca chiefs, Tommy Jimmy, Major Henry O'Bail and others, were, to the young enthusiast in border-lore, like visitations from a realm of fancy. La Fayette was the subject of young Draper's first school composition, while his first article for the press, published in the Rochester Gem for April 6, 1833, was a sketch of Charles Carroll, of Carrollton, the last of the "signers." One of the first his- torical works he ever read was Campbell's Annals of Tyron County; or, Border Warfare of New York, pub- lished in 183L This and other publications of the time were replete with lurid accounts of border disturbances, well calculated to fire the imagination of youth. Peter A. Remsen, a cotton factor at Mobile, Alabama, had married young Draper's cousin, and to Mobile went the enthusiastic historical student, now eighteen years of age staying with Remsen until May of the following year. "While in Mobile, Draper chiefly occupied himself in col- lecting information regarding the career of the famous Creek chief, Weatherford, many of whose contemporaries lived in the neighborhood of the Alabama metropolis. These manuscript notes, laboriously written down fifty- eight years ago, are, like the greater portion of his ma- terials for history, still mere unused literary bricks and stone. In 1834, during his nineteenth year, Draper entered the college at Granville, Ohio, now styled Denison university. Here he remained as an undergraduate for over two years. He appears to have made a good record as a student, but was compelled from lack of money to leave the institution. Remsen had returned to New York from the south, and was now living in the neighborhood of Alexander, Genesee county. Draper's father was a poor man and unable either to help his son toward an education or to support him in idleness. Lyman was undersized, not robust, and had 4 WISCONSIN HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS. [vol.xii. tastes which seemed to fit him only for an unprofitable life of letters. Remsen offered the young man a congenial home, without cost, and to this patron he again went upon leaving Granville. For a time he was placed at Hudson River seminary, in Stockport, his studies here being fol- lowed up with an extended course of private reading, chiefly historical. Doddridge, Flint, Withers, and afterward Hall, were the early historians of the border, and the young student of their works found that on many essential points and in most minor incidents there were great discrepancies be- tween them. It was in 1838, when twenty-three years of age, that Draper conceived the idea of writing a series of biographies of trans- Alleghany pioneers, in which he should be able by dint of original investigation to fill the gaps and correct the errors which so marred all books then extant upon this fertile specialty. This at once became his controlling thought, and he entered upon its execution with an enthusiasm which never lagged through a half century spent in the assiduous collection of material for what he always deemed the mission of his life; but unfortunately he only collected and investigated, and the biographies were never written. From the Remsen home. Draper began an extensive and long-continued correspondence with prominent pioneers all along the border line — with Drs. Daniel Drake and S. P. Hildreth, and Colonel John McDonald, of Ohio; William C. Preston, of South Carolina; Colonel Richard M, Johnson, Charles S. Todd, Major Bland W. Ballard, Dr. John Crog- han, and Joseph R. Underwood, of Kentucky; ex-Governor David Campbell, of Virginia, Colonel William Martin and Hugh L. White, of Tennessee, and scores of others of almost equal renown. Correspondence of this character, first with the pioneers and later with their descendants, he actively conducted till within a few days of his death. In 1840 he commenced the work of supplementing his correspondence with personal interviews with pioneers, and the descendants of pioneers and Revolutionary soldiers, in their homes: because he found that for his purpose the 1840-50.] LYMAN COPELAND DRAPER. 5 gaining of information through letters was slow and unsat- isfactory, the mails being- in those days tardy, unreliable and expensive, while many of those who possessed the rarest of the treasures sought were not adepts with the pen. There were no railroads then, and the eager collector of facts traveled on his great errand for many years, far and wide, by foot, by horseback, by stage, by lumber wagon and by steamboat, his constant companion being a knapsack well- laden with note books. In these journeys of discovery, largely through dense wildernesses. Draper traveled, in all, over sixty thousand miles, meeting with hundreds of curious incidents and hairbreadth escapes, by means of runaway horses, fright- ful storms, swollen streams, tipped-over stages, snagged steamboats, extremities of hunger, and the like, yet never once injured nor allowing any untoward circumstance to thwart the particular mission at the time in view. Many of those he sought, especially before 1850, were far removed from taverns and other conveniences of civilization; but pioneer hospitality was general and generous, and a stran- ger at the hearth a most welcome diversion to the dull routine of a frontiersman's household. The guest of the interviewed, the inquisitive stranger often stopped weeks together at those crude homes in the New York, Ohio, Ken- tucky, Virginia and Tennessee backwoods — long enough to extract, with the acquired skill of a cross-examiner, every morsel of historical information, every item of valu- able reminiscence stored in the mind of his host; while old diaries, or other family documents which might cast side- lights on the stirring and romantic story of western settle- ment, were deemed objects worth obtaining by means of the most astute diplomacy. It would be wearisome to give a list of those whom Draper visited in the course of these remarkable wander- ings which he made his chief occupation, with but few lapses, through nearly a quarter of a century, and contin- ued at intervals for many years after. Only a few of the most notable can be mentioned. Perhaps the most import- ant interview he ever had was with Major Bland Ballard, 6 WISCONSIN HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS. [vol. xii. of Kentucky, a noted Indian fig^hter under General George Rogers Clark in the latter's campaigns against the Ohio Indians. Other distinguished worthies who heaped their treasures at Draper's feet, were Major George M. Bedinger, a noted pioneer and Indian fighter, of Kentucky; General Benjamin Whiteman, of Ohio, and Captain James Ward, of Kentucky, two of Kenton's trusted lieutenants; and General William Hall, a general under Jackson in the Creek war, and afterward governor of Tennessee. Dra- per also interviewed fifteen of General Clark's old In- dian campaigners, and many of the associates and descend- ants of Boone, Kenton, Sumter, Sevier, Robertson, Pickens, Crawford, Shelby, Brady, Cleveland, and the Wetzels. He also visited and took notes among the aged survivors of several Indian tribes — the Senecas, Oneidas, Tuscaroras, Mohawks, Chickasaws, Catawbas, Wyandots, Shawanese, Delawares, and Pottawattomies. Not the least interesting of these were the venerable Tawanears, or Governor Black- snake, one of the Seneca war captains at Wyoming, who served as such with the famous Mohawk chief, Joseph Brant, and the scholarly Governor William Walker, of the Wyandots. The descendants of Brant among the Canada Mohawks, whom Draper interviewed at much length, gave him an Indian name signifying " The Inquirer." Draper once visited Andrew Jackson, at the home of the latter, and had a long conversation with the hero of New Orleans. At another time he was the guest of Colonel Richard M. Johnson, who is thought to have killed Tecumseh, and, as I have said before, frequently corresponded with him. He once saw Henry Clay, when in Kentucky on one of his hunts for manuscripts, and General Harrison, in Ohio, but had no opportunity to speak to either of them. The period of Draper's greatest activity in the direction of personal interviews was between 1840 and 3 879, but upon occasion he frequently resorted to that method of obtaining materials for history in his later years; while the period of his active correspondence in that direction was ended only by his death. The result of this half century of rare toil and drudgery was a rich harvest of collections. Upon the 1840-79.1 LYMAN COPELAND DRAPER. 7 shelves of his large private library, now the property of this Society, ^were, besides a still greater mass of loose papers, a hundred and fifty portly volumes of manu- scripts, the greater part made up of wholly original matter, nearly all of it as yet unpublished, covering the entire his- tory of the fight for the Northwest, from 1742, the date of the first skirmish with the Indians in the Virginia valley, to 1813-14, when Tecumseh was killed and the Creeks were defeated.' A few only of these unique documents can be noted in the time allotted me. The earliest manuscripts in the Draper collection are some documents concerning McDow- ell's fight in the Virginia valley, in 1743, just mentioned. There is also George Rogers Clark's original manuscript nar- rative of his famous expedition to Kaskaskiaand Vincennes in 1778, a volume of some two hundred and twenty -five pages. The earliest original manuscript diary in the col- lection is one kept by Captain William Preston, who com- manded a company under Lewis during the Sandy Creek expedition in West Virginia, in 1756. There are several diaries on the Point Pleasant campaign in West Virginia in 1774. Numerous diaries relate to Kentucky — one of them kept by Greorge Rogers Clark in 1776, and another by Col- onel William Fleming during an- early trip to the "dark and bloody ground." Some diaries on St. Clair's and Wayne's campaigns are of especial interest. But the fore- going are merely sample treasures. As the old frontier heroes were not noted for keeping diaries, the great num- ber and remarkable character of the rich material among the Draper manuscripts strongly illustrate to all those who have essayed collections of this sort, his arduous labors of a life-time. In 1841, while in the midst of his chosen task. Draper 'He himself computed, in 1857, that his matei'ial comprised "some 10,000 foolscap pages of notes of the recollections of warrioi -pioneers, either written by themselves, or taken down from their own lips; and well- nigh 5,000 ijages more of original manuscript journals, memorandum books, and old letters written by nearly all the leading border heroes of the Wes