Big Bottom massacre

Big Bottom massacre

The Big Bottom massacre occurred on January 2, 1791, near present-day Stockport in Morgan County, Ohio, United States. Delaware and Wyandot Indians surprised a new settlement on the Muskingum River, stormed the blockhouse and killed eleven men, one woman, and two children. Three settlers were captured while four others escaped into the woods.

The Ohio Company of Associates acted immediately after this to provide greater protection for settlers.

Previous treaties with Indians

On January 9, 1787 the Treaty at Fort Harmar was signed between the United States and the Wyandot Indian tribe. The Wyandots ceded land to the United States and agreed to not sell their land to anyone except for the US. The land of the Wyandots was reduced, but the land in Ohio was still under dispute. [ Duane Champagne, "Chronology of Native American History", (Detroit: Gale Research Inc, 1994), 1789. ]

Ohio Company of Associates

The actions by the Ohio Company of Associates can help understand why the Big Bottom Massacre occurred as well as the Indian wars that were going on in the Northwest Territory. The company was formed by a group of several American Revolution veterans from New England. They purchased approximately convert|1500000|acre|km2 from the United States in 1787. These early settlers followed national guidelines for settling the West and respected the government a great deal likely because of their role in the American Revolution. [ Andrew R. L. Cayton, "The Contours of Power in a Frontier Town: Marietta, Ohio, 1788-1803," "Journal of the Early Republic", (Summer 1986), 103-105. ] The founders of the Ohio Company promoted "orderly and nationalistic western expansion. Problems began to arise as more and more individuals bought into the land company, and individual goals began to take over. The founders of the company began to become worried about this occurrence. By 1791, an Indian war was raging in the Northwest Territory and threatened Marietta. A financial crisis in New York was hurting the investors as well as the company treasury. Also present among the company was a geographic divide between settlers in the West and in the East. Most of the power was centralized in the Eastern part of the territory and settlers in the West were not well represented. Westerners wanted protection from Indians but funds were low and the Ohio company refused. Following the Big Bottom Massacre, the Ohio Company provided protection for Western settlers in 1792. [ Timothy J. Shannon, "The Ohio Company and the Meaning of Opportunity in the American West, 1786-1795," "The New England Quarterly", (September 1991), 393-413. ]

Historical markers

A sign at the site of the massacre, which appears to be posted by the city of Stockport, reads:

Big Bottom, named for the broad Muskingum River Flood Plain, this park is the site of an attack on an Ohio Company settlement by Delaware and Wyandot Indians on Jan 2, 1791. The Big Bottom Massacre marked the outbreak of four years of frontier warfare in Ohio, which only stopped when General Anthony Wayne and the Indian Tribes signed the Treaty of Greeneville.

A second marker at the site, posted by the Ohio Historical Society, reads:


Big Bottom Massacre
Following the American Revolution, the new Federal government, in need of operating funds, sold millions of acres of western lands to land companies. One such company, the Ohio Company of Associates, brought settlement to Marietta in 1788. Two years later, despite warnings of Native American hostility, an association of 36 Company members moved north from Marietta to settle "Big Bottom," a large area of level land on the east side of the Muskingum River. The settlers were acquainted with Native American warfare, but even so, built an unprotected outpost. They did not complete the blockhouse, put pickets around it, or post a sentry. On Jan 2, 1791, a war party of 25 Delaware and Wyandot Indians from the north attacked the unsuspecting settlers, killing nine men, one woman and two children. War raged throughout the Ohio Country until August 1794 when the tribes were defeated at the Battle of Fallen Timbers.

A third marker was posted in 2002 by the Ohio Bicentennital Commission, the Longaberger Company, the Morgan County Bicentennial Committee, and the Ohio Historical Society. This monument reads:
*"Erected by Obadiah Brokaw, 1905"
*"Site of Big Bottom Massacre, Winter of 1790"
*"Escaped, Asa Bullard, Eleazer Bullard, Philip Stacy"
*"Killed, John Stacy, Zebulon Throop, Ezra Putnam, John Camp, Jonathan Farewell"
*"Killed, James Couch, Wm James, Joseph Clark, Isaac Meeks & his wife and two children"
John Stacy and Philip (Philemon) Stacy were sons of Colonel William Stacy of Marietta. Colonel Stacy was concerned about a possible Indian attack, and ice-skated thirty miles up the frozen Muskingum River in late December 1790 to warn his sons. His concerns were realized several days later. [Lemonds, Leo L.: "Col. William Stacy – Revolutionary War Hero", Cornhusker Press, Hastings, Nebraska (1993) pg 47.] [Pritchard, Joan: “Area man discovers long roots”, "Marietta A.M." newspaper, Parkersburg, West Virginia (July 24, 1994) pg 1C.] [Zimmer, Louise: "More True Stories from Pioneer Valley", published by Sugden Book Store, Marietta, Ohio (1993) chapter 10 entitled Massacre at Big Bottom, pg 92-101.] [Lane, Eula Rogers: "Ode to the Big Bottom Massacre", Richardson Printing, Marietta, Ohio (1975).]

Footnotes

References

*Adams, James Truslow. "Dictionary of American History". New York: Scribner's, 1940.

External links

* [http://www.ohiohistory.org/places/bgbottom/ Ohio History on Big Bottom]


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