Ohio History Journal




KENTON'S "CHILLICOTHE

KENTON'S "CHILLICOTHE."

 

BY T. J. BROWN, WAYNESVILLE, OHIO.

Having been born, and lived most of my life in Greene

county, and within easy driving distance of "Old Town," the

site of what I learned to designate as "New Chillicothe," and hav-

ing known, when a boy about 1840, an old Indian fighter who was

a participant in the ill-conducted Bowman expedition intended to

capture and destroy that village, I read up, very early in life, all

the adventures I could find, connected therewith.

As to the advance upon Chillicothe by Bowman's expedition

I think it can be safely said, and it is a matter of common tradi-

tion, that it crossed the Little Miami, from the west to the east a

couple of miles south of Waynesville, a quarter of a mile south of

the mouth of Caesar's Creek. Then after reaching a point about

three miles north, or rather, up the river from Waynesville, for

although the general trend.of the river is towards the south, it

has many large curves, it bore well to the east to escape a large

tract of marshy prairie opposite Mount Holly, which reached

from the river, nearly to the hills, and has not even yet been all

drained, then turned westward in the direction of our Chillicothe.

It is not my purpose to give an account of the attempted

surprise and its failure-it is well known that the retreat was

precipitant, the Indians' following and harrassing the Kentuckians

for many miles, but Mr. Snodgrass, to whom I have alluded,

said, the line of retreat was on the west side of the river, prob-

ably crossing the Miami at Indian Ripple, a couple of miles up

the river from Bellbrook, on the Upper Bellbrook and Xenia

road. The Kentuckians passed between Bellbrook and the river

and Mr. Snodgrass said they were attacked very fiercely at a point

on the farm on which I was born-long owned by my father.

The route designated, was a more direct one to come in touch

with the military trail south of Waynesville, than was the line of

advance, for be it known, Bowman was in a hurry to get south of

the Ohio.

(322)



Kenyon's "Chillicothe

Kenyon's "Chillicothe."              323

 

Now as to the identity of the Chillicothe which was the

scene of Kenton's running of the gauntlet, I am acquainted with

a little incident which bears upon that point. I was acquainted

for many of the later years of his life, with John Carman, who

was brought by his parents at 2 years of age, to the extreme

southwest corner of Greene county, about the year 1802. He

told me a few years before his death, now probably ten years

ago, that when he married he moved upon a tract of land some

miles east of Wilmington and about the year 1830, perhaps a lit-

tle earlier or later, he saw a man passing his premises who

was making very, leisurely progress but was closely scanning the

lay of the land and the appearance of the woods, and there was

plenty of woodland then. He measured his surroundings in the

keenest manner, so much so as to excite Mr. Carman's curiosity,

so he accosted him and inquired his object in scrutinizing the land

in such a manner, to which the stranger replied, he was Simon

Kenton, and that he was following up the line of his retreat when

he and his two companions escaped from the Indians. Kenton's

first gauntlet was run at Chillicothe, evidently on the Little Miami.

The next stage of his captivity brought him to Old Piqua, or

Pickaway, he was then taken farther and farther north, running

the gauntlet a number of times, and escaped at last, at Detroit,

and it seems, tried to keep as far away as possible from the

Miami villages, and still maintain as direct a route as safety would

allow.