.1 Ricliard Nugent, editor The whole art ok Government consists in the art of being honest. Jefferson; and Publisher VOL. I. STROUDSBURG.. MONROE COUNTY, PA., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1840. No 34. i t JEFFERSONIAN ItEPUBLICAN tp. rms. two dollars per annumin advance Two dollars ixwA a quarter, half yearly, and if nol paid before the end of trie year, Two dollars and n half. Those who receive their pa- iters oy a carrier or aagu um cuiinvuu uy wiu proprietor, Wl A-t'tl hit nhanrcd 37 1-2 cts. per year, extra No papers iiiscommucn uniu au arrearages are paw, exeep; irpAdvertisementsnot exceeding one square (sixteen lines) . it be inserted three weeks for one dollar s twenty-five cents 1 . oxorv subsequent insertion : larger ones in proportion. A t wral discount will be made to ycarly,adverlisers. tlAll letters addressed ioihc Edflfcr must be post paid. JOB PRINTING. l wing a general assortment of large elegant plain and orna mental Type, we are prepared to execute every t-s cription of Cards, Circulars, Bill Heads, Notes, Blank Receipts, JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER KliANKS, PAMPHLETS, &c. Printed with neatness and despatch, on reasonable terms. DELAWARE ACADEMY. The Trustees of this Institution, have the I'leasure of announcing to the public, and par- j.jularly to the friends of education, that they ;vc engaged Ira B. Newjia.v, as Superinten- I mii and Principal of their Academy. I The Trustees invite the attention of parents I ml guardians, wbo have children to send from i ome, to this Institution. They are fitting up Tie building in the first style, and its location i'fom its retired nature is peculiarly favorable l or a boarding school. It commands a bcauti : iul view of the Delaware river, near which it is situated, and the surrounding scenery such as the lover of nature will admire it is easily ;tCCCiSlDlO uit4 ...... I' -'-. u daily, and only 8 miles distant from the latter h place, and a more salubrious section of coun try can nowhere be found. No tears need be entertained that pupils will contract pernicious habits, or be seduced into vicious company it is removed from all places of resort and those inducements to neglect their studies tirat are , ; i 1 1 . 1 lurnisneo. m targe iowus ami wuugei. Board can be obtained very fow and near the Academy. Mr. Daniel W. Dingman, jr will take several boarders, his house is very conve nient, and students will there be under the im mediate care of the Principal, whose reputa tion, deportment and guardianship over his pu pils, afford the best security for their proper conduct, that the Trustees can give or parents and guardians demand. The course of instruction will be thorough adapted to the age of the pupil and the time he designs to spend in literary pursuits. Young men may qualify themselves tor entering upon tiie study of the learned professions or for an advanced stand at College for mercantile pur suits, for teaching or the business of common life, useful will be preferred to ornamental stud ies, nevertheless so much of the latter attended u as the advanced stages of the pupil's educa tion wilt admit. The male and female depart ment will be under the immediate sup-crintend- dence of the Principal, aided by a competent male or female Assistant. Lessons in music will ha1 given to young ladies on the Piano Forte' at the boarding house of the principal, by an experienced and accomplished Instructress. Stunner Session commences May 4lhv EXPENSES. Board for Young Gentleman or Ladies with the Principal,, per week, $ 1 50 Punils- from 10 to 15 years of are from $1 to Tuition' for the Classics, Belles-Lettres, French f &c, per quarter 2 00 i.. - - Extra for music, per quarter, 5 0D N. B. A particular course of study will be marked out for those who wish to qualify them selves for Common School Teachers with ref erence to that object'; application made for teachers to the trustees or principal will meet fe iannediate attention, h Lectures on the various-subjects of study will he delivered bv aide speakers, throush the course of year. "Bv ordorofthe Board- DANIEL W. DINGMAN. Pres't toingman's Ferry, Pike co., Pa.,-May 2 1840 NOTICE. The Book of Subscription to the Stock of the I Upper Lehigh Navigation Company, will be rc- i opened nt btoddartsville, on v ednesday, ttic ISM day of July ensuing, when subsciiptions will be , received for the balance or stock which remains Jiddeis will t-lect a board of Directors. Charles Trump, .John S. Comfort, Meury W. Drinkci William P. Clark, Cororaissioners June lfi, 13 JO. N. 15: Proposals will be received at Stoddarts viHe, on 'Thursday the 16th day of July ensuing, for doing the work either wholly or in jobs, requi red by building a lock .and iiiGlihcd plane; .with the lecessary grading, fixtures and machinery for jassin rafts descending the Lehigh ov,er tho. Falls u Stoddartsvillc. Jt is expected that the wort -t ill be commenced as soon as practicable and be completed with dasnatch. Wyoming Sketches. (continued.) "Now set the teeth, and stretch the nostril wide Hold hard the breath, and bend up every spirit To his full height!" "O, war thou son of hell! Whom angry heavens do make their minister." The dark and threatening sayings of a drunk en squaw, who with a small party of Indians had been straying around the settlements, had awakened some suspicions that an attack was meditated by the enemy in the course of the sea son, and a message had been sent to head quar ters of the continental army, early in June, praying for a detachment of troops for their protection. To this request no answer had been received. To fly, however, with their women and children, with an agile enemy upon their very heels, was impossible, even had the thought been entertained. But it was not. The men of Wyoming, and the boys likewise, were brave, and they had strong confidence that they should be able to repel the invader. No soon er was his presence known, therefore, than the militia rapidly assembled at a defence called "Fort Forty," from the circumstance that fortv of the settlers had originally joined their eiTorts in its erection, situated immediately on the west bank of the river, some three miles north of Fort Wyoming. Small garrisons of aged men were lelt in the other feeble forts of the colo nists, for the protection of the women and chil dren assembled therein, while the major part of those capable of bearing arms, old men and boys, fathers, grand fathers and grand-sons, assembled at fort Forty to the number of nearly four hundred. Colonel Zebulon Butler, heretofore mention ed as a soldier in the French war, and as being placed in ihe commission cfihe pcrjs, v"- an officer in the continental army, and happen ing to be at home at the time of the invasion, on the invitation of the people he accepted the command. A council of war was called on the morning of the 3rd, to determine upon the ex pediency of marching out, and giving the enemy battle, or of awaiting his advance. There were some who preferred delay, in the hope that a reinforcement would arrive from the camp of General Washington. Others maintained that as no advices had been received from thence in reply to their application, the messenger had probably been cut off; and as the enemy's force was constantly increasing, they thought it best to meet and repel him at once if possible. The debates were warm; and before they were end ed, five commissioned officers, who, hearing of the anticipated invasion, had obtained permis sion to return for the defence of their families, joined them. Their arrival extinguished the hope of present succor, and the result oF the coun cil was a determination for an immediate attack. As soon as the proper dispositions could be made, Colonel Zebulon Butler placed himself at the head of the undisciplined force, and led them forward, the design being t'o"-take the en emy by surprise'. And such would probably have been the issue' but for the occurrence of one of those untoward incidents against which human wisdom cannot guard. A scout, having been sent forward to reconnoitre, found the en emy at' dinner, not anticipating an! attack, and in high' and frolicsome glee. But on its return to report the fact the scout was fired upon by a straggling Indian, which gave the alarm. 'The consequence was, that oil the approach of the American', they found the enemy in line, ready for their reception. -"Colonel Z. Butler com manded the right of the Americans, aided by Major Garratt. The left was commanded by Colonel Dennison, of the Wj'oming militia, as sisted by Lieut. Colonel Dorrance. Opposed to the right of the Americans and also- resting upon the bank of the river,-was Col. John But ler, with his rangers. The right of the enemy, resting upon, or rather extending into a marsh, was Composed principally of Indians arid' tones, led by a celebrated Seneca chief named Gi-cn-gwak-loh; or, He-wlio-gocs-in-thc-Smolic. The field of battle was a plain, partly improved and partly covered with sc"rdb oaks"and yellow pine. The action began soon after four o'clock iu the afternoon, and was for a time kept up on both sides with great spirit. The right of the Americans advanced bravely as they fired', aud tlie best troops of the enemy were compelled to give back. But while the advantages were thus with the Americans on the right, far difi'ercnt was the case on the lelt. rcnetratinp- the thicket of the swamp, a heavy body of the In dians were enabled, unperceived, to outflank Colonel Dennison, and suddenly like a dark cloud to fall updh his rear. The Americans, thus standing between two fi'res, fell fast before the rifles of the Indians and tories, but yet they faltered not, until an order from Colonel Den nisofi to "fall bacr:,,r for the purpose only of changing p"osh'ibn, Was mistaken for an order to retreat. The misconception was fatal. The confusion instantly became so great that restora tion to order was impossible. The enemy, nol moro brave, but better skilled in the horrid frade of savage war, and far more numerous withal, sprung forward, and as they made the air resound' with their frightful yells, rushed upon' the' Americans, hand to hand, tomahawk and spear. But tho handful of regulars, and Shosrt who were nol at first thrown into' confu sion, did all they could'dblcrretrhi ve the fortunes of the day. Observing one of his men to yield a. little ground, Colonel Dorrance called to him, with the utmost coolness "Stand up to your work, sir!" The colonel immediately fell. As the enenry obtained the rear, an officer notified Captain Hewettof the fact, and inquired, "Shall we retreat, sir?" "I'll be d d if 1 do," was his reply and he fell instantly dead at the head of his little command. The retreat now became a flight, attended with horrible carnage. "We are nearly alone," said an officer named West- brook "shall we go?" "Ill have one more shot," said a Mr. Cooper, in reply. At the same instant a savage sprang toward him with his spear, but was brought to the ground in his leap, and Cooper deliberately re-loaded his piece before he moved. On the first discovery of the confusion on the left, Colonel Zebulon Butler rode into the thickest of the melee, ex claiming "Don't leave me, my children! The victory will yet be ours." But numbers and discipline, and the Indians to boot, were against the Americans, and their rout was complete. DLiing the flight to Fort Forty, the scene was that of horrible slaughter. Nor did the darkness put an end to the work of death. No assault was made upon the fort that night; but many of the prisoners taken were put to death by torture. The place of these murders was about two miles North of Fort Forty, upon a rock, around which the Indians formed them selves in a circle. The prisoners were placed upon the rock, and the squaws struck their heads open with the tomahawk. It has been said, both in tradition and in print, that the priestess of this bloody sacrifice was the cele brated Catharine Montour, sometimes called Queen Esther, whose residence was at Catha rmestown, at the head of Seneca Lake. But we cannot believe the tale. Catharine Montour was a half-breed, who had been well educated in Canada. Her reputed father was one of the French governors, probably Count Frontignac, and she herself was a lady of comparative re finement. She was much caressed in 'Phila-r delphia, and mingled in the best society. Hence we have not the remotest belief that she was the Hecate of that fell night. A night indeed of terror; for " Somids that mingled laugh', and shout, and scream To freeze the blood in one discordant jar, Rung the pealing thunderbolts of war. Whoop after whoop with rack the carassailed, As if unearthly fiends had burst their bar; While rapidly the marksman's shot prevailed ; And aye, as if for death, some lonely trumpet wailed I" When the numbers are taken into the ac count, the slaughter on this occasion was dread ful. The five officers who arrived from the continental army on the morning of the battle were all slain. Captain Hewctt, who fell, had a son in the battle with him, aged eighteen. Captain Aholiah Buck, and his son, aged only fourteen, were both slain. Anderson Dana, the representative of the valley in the Connecticut legislature, had returned from the session jiust in season to fight and fall. His son-in-law, Stephen Whiting, who had been married to his daughter but a few months before, went in to the battle with himyand was also slain. Thefe was a large family named Gore, one of whom was with the continental army. Those at home, five brothers and two brothers-in-law, went into the battle, and of these, five were dead upon the field at night,- a sixth was wounded, and one only escaped unhurt. Of the family of Mr. Weeks, seven went into the battle, viz: five sons and sons-in-law, and two inmates. Not one of the number escaped. These are but a few instances of manv, which we have selected for tho purpose of showing how gen eral was the rush to' the field, and how direful the carnage'. Our friend Charles Miner has thus elo quently described the closing scene of that day, as toward nightfall the fugitives came, fly ing for shelter to the little forts. " The raven ous vulture was seen wheeling aloft, ready, to pounce on' the ri'est of the pearieful dove. The war-whoop and the scalp-yell of the savage Mohawk resounded through the valley. These were fiends who rip up, with merciless cruelty, the tcemirig mother,-who strike the-grey haired father to the earth, and dash out the infant's brains on the doorpost. This was the terrible enemy that came down upon us, in overwhelm ing numbers. The battle was lost. Ntik&l, panting and bloody a few who had oscaped came rushiug into Wilkesbarre fort, where, trembling with anxiety, the women and children were gathered, waiting ,the dread ispue. The appalling " All is lost" proclaimed their utter destitution. They fly to the mountains eve ning i3 approaching the dreary swamp and .shades of death before them, the' victorious HelMiounds are opening on heir track. " Byhold that aged sire, climbing tho hill, a little boy clinging to his side. See that mother following his uncertain steps, an infant on her bosom and leading a little girl by trie hand ; they have neither bread nor shelter. She looks back on the valley all around the flames of desolation are kindling; sho casts her eye in tho range of the battle .field; numerous fires spbak their own horrid purpose She listen ! The exultjng yell of tho savage strikes hor ear ! Again ra shriek of agdnising woe! Who is the sufferer ! It is -her husband ! tho father of hor children ! !" " O God who art the widow's friend Be thou her comforter." The fair fields of Wyoming presented a mel ancholy spectacle on the morning of the 4th. The pursuit of the Indians had ceased the preceding evening with the nightfall, and the work of death was completed by the tragedy at the Bloody Rock. But the sun arose upon the carcasses of the dead not only dead but horribly mangled strewn over the plain from the point where the battle began to Fort Forty. A few stragglers had at first taken refuge in that defence, but they did not retain it long ; and by the morning light, all who had not been slain, or who had not betaken themselves to the mountains, had collected at Fort Wyoming, before which Colonel John Butler with his motley forces appeared at an early hour, and demanded a surrender. It appears that some negotiations upon the subject of a capitulation had been interchanged the preceding evening, but what point is uncertain probably at fort Forty. Be that as it may, it was understood that no terms would be listened to by the ene-. my but that of the unconditional surrender of Colonel Zebulon Butler, and the small handful of regular troops, numbering only fifteen, who had escaped the battle, to the tender tnercias of the Indians. Under these circumstances, means of escape for the Colonel and those fif teen men wore found during the night. The former succeeded in making his way to one of the Moi avian settlements on the Lehigh, and the latter fled to Shamokin. The little fort being now surrounded by cloud of Indians and tories, and having no means of defence, Colonel Dennison, now in command, yielded to the force of circumstan ces, and the importunities of the women and children, and entered into articles of capitula tion. By these it was mutually agreed that the inhabitants of the settlement should lay down their arms, the fort be demolished, and the continental stores be delivered up. The in habitants of the settlement were to be permit ted to occupy their farms peaceably, and with out molestation of their persons. 1 he loyal ists of the settlement were to be permitted to remain in the neaceable possession ol their --------- j- j. farms, and to trade without interruption. Co lonel Dennison and the inhabitants stipulated not again to take up arms during the contest, and Colonel John Butler agreed to use his ut most influence to cause the private property of the inhabitants to be respected. But the last-mentioned stipulation was entire ly unheeded by the Indians, who were not, and perhaps could not be, restrained from the v6rJt of rapine and plunder. 1 he surrender had no sooner taken place than they spread through the valley. iery house not belonging to a loyalist was plundered, ana then laid in asnea. The greater part of the inhabitants, not enga ged in the battle, men, women, and children, had fled to the mountains toward tho Delaware; and as the work of destruction was re-commenced, many others followed the example. The village of Wilkesbarre consisted of twenty three houses. It was burnt, and the entire population fled. No lives were taken by the Indians after the surrender: but numbers of women and children perished in the dismal swamp on the Pocono range of mountains, and some of those who remained tV harvest the fields,- were killed in subsequent incursions of the Indians. The whole number ol people kil led aii'd ihissing was about three hundred. Until the publication, last year, of the Life of Brant, by the writer of the present sketches, it liad beon asserted in all'lii'story, that that cel ebrated. Mohawk chieftain was the Indian lea- . it- tt' i!r i . tr - J .1 der at Wyoming, ric nimsen aiways aeuieu any participation iti this' bloody expedition, and his assertions were always corroborated by the British officers, when questioned upon' the sub ject. But these denials, not appearing in his tory, relieved him not from the odium; and the " monster Brant" has been denounced', the world over, as the author of the massacre. In the work referred to a.bove, the author took upon himself the vindication ol the savage warrior from the accusation, and, as he thought at the time, with success. A reviewer of that work, however, in the' Democratic, Magazine, who is understood to be the Hon'. Caleb Cush ing, of Massachusetts, disputed tho point, main taining that the vindication was not satisfacto ry. The author thereupon made a journey irr to the Seneca couhtry, aiiil pushed the investi gation among the surviving chiefs and warriors of the Senecas engaged in that campaign. The result was a triumphant acciuittal of Brant from all narticpation therein. The celebrated chief Captain Pollard, whose Indian name is Kaoitn doow&nd, a fii.e old warrior, was a young chief in thai batile. . He gave us a full accotmt of it, and was clear and positive in his declarations that Brant and tlie Mohawks were not engaged in tlmt rfimnrnnfi nt a 11. Their leader, he as- snrfld us wns Gi-en.frwah-toh. as mentioned J - a - . v.i in a nrecedintr column of these sketches, who lived I o ed many years afterward, and- was sue in his chieftaincy by tho late Young ceeded in his chieftaincy Ari.-r-That point of history, therefore, may bo considered as conclusively settieu. But after all', tlie greatest barbarities. of.this celobrated massacre were committed by the to- nos. Many loyalists, us wo havo already seen, had months before d'ftited themselves with the enemy at Niagara ; and on his arrival at the head of the valley, many more of the settlers joined his ranks. These all fought with tho most brutal ferocity against their former neigh bors, and were guilty of acts of which even this distant contemplation curdles the blood. Of these acts a single one must suffice. During the bloody fight of, the 3rd, some of the fugi tives plunged into the river and escaped to the oppositeshore. A few landed upon Mdfiocko nock Island, having lost their arms in the flight, and were pursued thither. One of them was discovered by his ovyn brother, who had es poused the side of the crown. The unarnet Whig fell upon his knees before his brother and offered to serve him aisa slave forever, if he would but spare his life. But the fiend nr human form was inexorable; he muttered, uynu are a d d tori" and shot him dead. This tale is so horrible, that until the present visit to Wyoming we had been compelled? to doubt it. But a' survivor of the battle, a Mr. Baldwin, has confirmed its truth Vrth his oWii lips. He informed us that tie knew the' brothers well, and that the fact was so. We visited the bank of the river opposite the fatal spot, and could almost fancy ourselves spectators of the harrpwingscene The fugitives generally crossed the moun tains to Stroudsburg, where there was a small military post. Many of them continued thejr journey back to" Connecticut, ascending tW Delaware and crossing over to the Hudson at Poughkeepsie. It was at this place that the first account of the massacre was published. It was collected from the lips jof the panic stricken' and suffering fugitives, and was full of enormous exaggerations, such as the alleged massacre of women and children, the bnrfrinw of forts full of people, &c None of these tales were true, albeit they found their way in to Dr. Thatcher's Military Journal. A vener able old lady whom we visited, Mrs. Bidlack, and of whom we shall have 6ccasi6n to speak again, was one of the captives surrounded at the fort, being then about sixteen years old. She informed us that trie Indians were, kind, to them after they were taken, except that they plun dered them of every thing but the clolhes upoh their backs. They marked them with paint to prevent them from being killed by other Indians. The fields of Wyoming were waving with! heavy burdens of grain, ripening for the har vest, at the time of the invasion, and no soon er had the enemy retired' than considerable numbers of the settlers returned to secure thyir crops. A detachment of regular troops, utiuc Captain Spaulding,'arrived soon after tho battle, and, a small fort was erected at which post h'eJ remained more than1 two years during which time many of the settlers came back and re built their houses, and resumed their stations in tlie settlement. There was, however, but little repose for the settlement until the close of the war. The In dians were frequently rVovering up&h the out skirts, by straggling scouts, and in larger par ties,' in quest of scalps, prisoners, and plunder. Sometimes they appeared' in considerable num bers. In the month of March; 1779, Captain? Spaulding's fort was surrounded by about two' hundred and fifty Indians and painted tories". They commenced an' attack upon the fort, but fled on the discharge of a field" piece destroy ing such property as" came in their way. The strength of the garrison- was too small to allow 6f pursuit.' ,. . , In the summed ot 17 y, Wyoming was lor a time the head quarters of General Sullivan,, when assembling" his troops for the celebrated expedition of that year through the Genesee country. Alter he naa moved lorwaru m mat campaign a brisk action was lougbt between a detachment of Pennsylvania militia, moving to the north for the protection of the Ladkawaxeir settlements, and a party of one hundred' and fifty Indians," in which tM former were defeat- ed, with the foss ol Jbetween lorty anu nuy men killed and taken. Indeed, there were maiiy se- ere skirmishes, especially between the yo- mina neoDle and the Indians several heroic risings of Indians upon their captors and ma ny hair-breadth escapes between this period and the close of the war, the details of which are reserved for another occasion. (to be continued.) nTiRCH Music. Some mischievous warrliavincr greased tho spectacles of a clerk of a church, the latter, on attempting to give out tho hymn, imagin ing that his eye sight was failing, excraitrd with his usual twang " My eyes are blind, I cirinot fceo." The people, imagining this as a nart of the hymn, began immediately 'm sing it; whereujv a tlie clerk, wishing to coi-otthem, continued-- " I cannot scq Xi all," Which being alao snnr, i,c Jinwled' out w fdV somewhat lei'3 monolonv- "Indeed, my oyos are very blind," This beincr sung oo,-tlio clerk, out of patience- exclaimed " The Devlin in you all." As this appeared to rhyme very' weUths'siiig ors finished, the stanza-: 114 My eyes are Wind,. I cannpt see I cannot see at alt ; Indeed, my eyes are very blind j i