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Latest update: Saturday, September 20, 2008

 
September 18
, 2002
 
 


PEN
and PENCIL
of the
Shawnee-Blue Jackets

Published semi-occasionally in Indian Territory "You can’t hardly ever find this stuff nowhere else, and that’s the truth!"

Editorial Staff

 

Our thoughts and prayers go out to the
families of the victims of
9-11 tragedy.
The Shawnee-Blue Jacket Families

OLD CHILLICOTHE
and BLUE JACKET

by Carlyle Hinshaw

William A. Galloway’s book, Old Chillicothe: Shawnee and pioneer history; conflicts and romances in the Northwest territory, is an oft quoted, often relied upon reference used by contemporary authors and researchers. It contains a short section on Blue Jacket, the last principal war chief of the Shawnee Tribe. A surprising amount of the material is in error and is here pointed out at the end of paragraphs needing attention. The Galloway work is interesting, historically enlightening, and above all, entertaining.  continued
 

The Legend of Blue Jacket
A new book that Blue Jacket relatives need to find out about.  See the review here and learn lots about our founder.


The Legend of Blue Jacket
by Michael P. Spradlin |
illustrated by Ronald Hinter

30 p. Harper Collins Publishers 2002 LCCN: 2001024749

A BOOK REVIEW
by G. Carlyle Hinshaw
1713 Baron Drive
Norman OK 73071
405 364-4584

The copyright page lists this beautifully illustrated book as a biography of Blue Jacket, b. ca. 1753 and written for juveniles. The format is a first person narrative about the great Shawnee Indian chief’s life in Ohio country during the 18th century.

On the front, inside flap of the cover, the publisher says:

“He was only sixteen when the Shawnee Indians took him from his home. But he wasn’t captured. He went willingly. And, after many years of proving his bravery in battle against the colonists, he was named war chief of the Shawnee. His name was Blue Jacket.

Here, told in riveting narrative and stunning, historically accurate illustrations, is the incredible story of a white boy who spent the first sixteen years of his life among white settlers and the rest of his life fighting them.”

Here, the publisher portrays its book as stunning and historically accurate. Certainly, parents and teenagers with an eye for knowledge, will read the flap, gobble up this information and shell out, as your reviewer did, the money for this good looking book. Later, as libraries begin to shelve this publication, this material encased for juveniles will spread across the land. Unfortunately, young minds reading it will be taught a highly inaccurate fable, retaining it the rest of their lives.

In the Preface (p. 1.), the author says he spent twelve years researching literature and it seems that it took him that long to convince himself that he was telling the true story of Marmaduke Van Swearingen, a white person who became Blue Jacket, war chief of the Shawnee Tribe, despite what honored historians have negated with their scholarly investigations. He tells the reader, in effect, that he is right and everyone else is wrong, citing no specific references. He states: “From all that I have read and studied, I believe that Marmaduke Van Swearingen was born in 1753 and was captured by the Shawnees in the spring of 1769.” This statement relegates his work to the realm of belief, not fact, and to foist this on developing minds is a travesty.

Blue Jacket and Shawnee peers, including Silverheels (the Treasurer of the Shawnee Tribe in Miami, Oklahoma, Georgie Honey, is a descendant of Silverheels), were trading with the Ohio Company in 1752 and 1753 as documented by that company’s records. These original financial reports were transcribed and published by Kenneth P. Bailey, Associate Professor of History, Humboldt State College, in his THE OHIO COMPANY PAPERS, 1753-1817, Being Primarily Papers of the “Suffering Traders” of Pennsylvania, Argata, California, 1947. Transactions listed on page 50 (1753) show that Blue Jacket’s Eldest Brother sold 17 deer hides (Bucks) and 1 Doe, receiving 6 pounds, 11 shillings and 3 pence in return. His Younger Brother traded 21 Bucks for 7 pounds, 17 shillings and 6 pence. Silver Heels (Silverheels) got 5 pounds, 1 shilling and 3 pence for 13 Bucks and 1 Doe. On page 56, Blue Jacket traded 45 Bucks for 16 pounds, 17 shillings and 6 pence. On page 57, it comes to light that the traders let the Indians “charge” trade goods received. Here, Blue Jacket pledged that he owed 7 Bucks to David Hendricks to pay off 2 pounds, 12 shillings and 6 pence worth of trade goods! On page 99 (1752) Blue Jacket sold 10 Bucks and 1 Doe for 7 pounds, 6 shillings and 3 pence. Lower Shawnee Town, at the confluence of the Ohio and Scioto rivers, was, at that time, the principal Shawnee settlement that both English and French traders flocked. Finally, and this is very interesting, on page 157, Virginia colonist Adam Terrance suffered a French promoted Indian raid on his establishment at the confluence of the Ohio and Muskingum rivers, up stream of Lower Shawnee Town. His losses, booked forward receipts (“charged” goods) due him by Shawnee and Delaware Indians, included a Blue Jacket owing of 6 pounds, 7 shillings and 6 pence. In other words, the Indian guys “charged’ some stuff then came back and stole Adam blind!

Although the above was lengthy, it is incumbent on this reviewer to document his statements just as any author. If the reader has, like this reviewer, a vested interest in the true history of Blue Jacket, we will get into more, very interesting Shawnee heritage. So, read on, Pilgrim!

Silver Heels (Silverheels) was the younger brother of Keigh-tugh-qua (Cornstalk) and Nonhelema (The Grenadier Squaw), Shawnee leaders of the 1760’s and 1770’s. The families had not yet moved up the Scioto to the Pickaway Plains, just south of present day Circleville, Ohio..

On page 2 of his Legend, Spradlin says that Blue Jacket’s born name was Duke (diminished from Marmaduke) Van Swearingen (the Van was dropped from the Swearingen family name years before this) and that they lived in western Virginia. On ensuing pages, he and his brother, Charlie, went herb gathering in the woods and were captured by Pucksinwah (father of Tecumseh, also spelled Pucksinwa and Puckeshinwau by other historians) who was leading a party of Shawnees. Duke agreed to stay with them in return for letting Charlie go. Taken to Pucksinwah’s village, Duke was renamed Blue Jacket and adopted by Black Fish, becoming a full (blood excluded) Shawnee. No dates are proffered in the text, but Spradlin states in the Preface that it was in 1769.

Herein then, is an insurmountable problem relating to the publishers claim of historical accuracy. Karel L. Whyte is a Swearingen descendant and the foremost historian of that family. In her book, SWEARINGEN/VAN SWEARINGEN and RELATED FAMILIES, 1997, Karel L. Whyte, 224, Heathewood Dr. Aiken SC 29803, LCCN: 97191585, unerringly demonstrates that Marmaduke was born January 2, 1763, near Hagerstown, Maryland. His birth date is from a family Bible that belonged to Joseph Swearingen, a son of Marmaduke’s brother, Charles Swearingen. As of two years ago, that Bible was in the possession of Thomas G. Swearingten of Uniondale, Indiana, a chemist for Phelps Dodge Corporation. A copy of the family record can be found at the Ross County Historical Society Library in Chillicothe, Ohio.

The family estate was not in Virginia, but in (now) Fayette County, Pennsylvania. John, Marmaduke’s father, had moved there in 1770 (see Whyte) and died there. His will was probated on September 6, 1784. A copy of the will is included in the book (page 275) of Robert V. Van Trees, Banks of the Wabash, 2002, 3rd ed., rev., Van Trees Associates, 589 Westwood Drive, Fairborn, Ohio 45324, 300 p., ISBN 0-961-6282-3-5. In the will, John Swearingen left to his son, Marmaduke, the use of John’s slave, Herry, for the term of one year, after which Herry reverted to Marmaduke’s mother, Cathrine (Stull) Swearingen.

Shucks, any middle school math student will admit that Spradlin’s above equation which includes the year 1753 just won’t fly! Charles Swearingen, Marmaduke’s brother, was born at the Fayette County home on September 26, 1767. If he and Marmaduke were wandering around in the woods in the spring of 1769, neither one could hardly see over a herb!

The capturing Shawnee, Pucksinwah, first addresses Marmaduke by his new Indian name, Blue Jacket, on page 11 of the author’s book, wherein the boy is asked if he would like to stay with the Tribe. The youngster answers, “The heart of Blue Jacket is now a Shawnee heart.” The origin of the name is alluded to on pages 4 and 6 where the captive is said to have been wearing a blue jacket when taken in custody. The jacket is described as one made of linsey-woolsey. As shown above, as early as 1752, the British were addressing this chief-to-be by the name “Blue Jacket”, a word of their choosing. In reality, he had a Shawnee language name, believe it or not. The name given by his parents was Se-pet-te-ke-na-the, Big Rabbit, which he used as late as 1776 (page 27 of Sugden, John, Blue Jacket, Warrior of the Shawnees, 2000, University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, LCCN: 00022192.). Before 1778, he chose, as some Shawnees did, to use Waweyapiersenwaw, the Whirlpool. Jasper Yates and Col. John Montgomery (Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Vol. 5, pp. 484-485.) recorded him under that name as one of the tribal representatives present at the signing of the Treaty of Fort Pitt in that year. The same name is affixed to the Treaty of Green Ville in 1795. A third name, Sasesequa, was passed by James Galloway in his letter to Benjamin Drake in 1839 (Draper Manuscripts, BJ245-259.). Now, after all that, we still have a way to go in this name business. The Blue Jacket family heritage brings down the origin of the term “Blue Jacket” as being the Chief’s wearing of a French officers coat as a youngster. This makes excellent sense, because the Shawnees traded more with the French than with the English at Lower Shawnee Town prior to the exploratory trip down the Ohio by Chirstopher Gist on behalf of the Ohio Company in 1750. Gist’s trip is what opened up Ohio country for the British and the trading records show this. This origin of the use of “Blue Jacket” is recorded in a published interview by W. T. Holland on August 13, 1937 for the Oklahoma Historical Society (Indian Pioneer History, vol. 15). Holland’s interviewee was Pearl Tecumsah Blue Jacket, a first cousin to this reviewer’s grandmother, Gertrude Hinshaw, and Pearl passed that information along for Holland’s records. As an aside, but important for this record, Gertrude, at age 13, took Pearl (the younger of the two) in hand and they went to Carlisle Indian School, Carlisle, Pennsylvania from 1893 until 1896. Pearl became a dedicated preservationist of Shawnee native life and in 1943, crafted a beautiful bow of Bois ‘d Arc for this reviewer. The common grandfather of those two cousins was Henry Blue Jacket, a signer of the Shawnee Treaty of 1854, which, in effect, caused the removal of the Shawnee Tribe from Kansas to Indian Territory in 1871. Henry Blue Jacket was a grandson of Blue Jacket, being born on the Huron River in southeastern Michigan Territory about 1800. The old Chief died in 1808 (about 68 years of age) at what is now Wyandotte, Michigan and was buried in a Wyandot Indian cemetery there. His sixth generation descendant, Margaret McGrath, also a Blue Jacket family historian, lives in Wyandotte today. As a result, this trail of passing is a valid document.

Blue Jacket was in his young adult years, honing his warrior talents and leadership qualities in the 1760’s and early 1770’s just as Spradlin indicates. On page 16, he marries a captured white (English from Virginia) girl and she births son Joseph. No dates are given but certainly in the mid 60’s. In 1774, Shawnee leader Cornstalk, trying to stem white encroachment, attacked the Army of Lord Dunsmore, Royal Governor of Virginia Colony. Called the battle of Point Pleasant, where the Kanawha River empties into the Ohio (now western West Virginia), Pucksinwah perishes in the conflict. Blue Jacket’s wife was then repatriated, being pregnant with daughter to be, Nancy. Son Joseph stayed with his father (Joseph was killed the War of 1812). Although forbidden to go into “Caintuckee” by the Point Pleasant aftermath, Black Fish led a party toward Blue Licks, north of Daniel Boone’s settlements. They met a party of whites near there led by Boone and a fight erupted with Boone being captured and taken to the Shawnee villages north of the Ohio. He later escaped and returned to Cai ntuckee. Now in the American Revolution years, the Shawnee continued to harass Caintuckee settlements, which were anti British American. Raids between the two peoples became tit for tat and Blue Jacket was captured by Boone’s men on one of these forays. He escaped the same night with a bit of help from Boone himself.

After the United States became a reality, the Shawnee continued to try and rid their beloved Ohio country of Americans. Blue Jacket was elevated to the position of principal war chief of the Shawnee Tribe and the book ends there, leaving many more years of conflict to evolve in the history of Blue Jacket and his people. The latter promotion took place about 1787 but the date was not included in the text.

A last page (p. 30) entitled Afterward, continues with an outline of later events, including the battles of St. Claire’s defeat and Fallen Timbers. It also has some brief comments on other facets of Blue Jacket’s life with some errors but none that surpass Marmaduke. It chronicles moves of the Shawnee Tribe to Kansas and into Indian Territory.

The life of Blue Jacket as the Shawnee Indian he really was, is the stuff of which real legends are made. Had Spradlin just left Marmaduke Van Swearingen out of it, since the white guy was in effect, a total lie, his dollars would still roll in. Blue Jacket was a legend in his own time and Spradlin points out that his leadership may have been the best of all native Americans who battled for their peoples rights.

I cannot, in good judgment, recommend the purchase of The Legend of Blue Jacket. The illustrations by Ronald Hinter are simply superb and I commend him for that excellent work.

An Appendix by Karel L. Whyte is enclosed. She wrote the article for the Blue Jackets family website. It gives an excellent history of how Marmaduke was inserted into Blue Jacket history and tarnished the heritage of both the Blue Jacket and Swearingen families.

October 31, 2002

Gaylord Carlyle Hinshaw is a seventh generation descendant of Blue Jacket. He was born in Stockton CA and was raised in Parsons KS, which is about 40 miles northwest of Blue Jacket OK, where his grandmother, Gertrude Hinshaw, a daughter of Emma Blue Jacket, was born. Mr. Hinshaw is council member 911U10381 of the Shawnee Tribe, a federally recognized native American group in Miami OK. He earned BS and MS degrees in geology from Kansas State University and is a consulting geologist, calling his company Blue Jacket Exploration.

Appendix
It’s Fiction - not Fact!
by Karel L. Whyte

Marmaduke Swearingen was born 2 Jan 1763, near Hagerstown, MD. His birthdate is from a family Bible which belonged to Joseph Swearingen, a son of Marmaduke’s brother, Charles Swearingen. As of two years ago, the Bible has been in the possession of Thomas G. Swearingten of Uniondale, Indiana, a chemist for Phelps Dodge Corporation. A copy of the family record can be found at the Ross County Historical Society Library in Chillicothe, OH.

Marmaduke Swearingen was named in his father’s will, which was written in 1784, at which time he would have been 21 years old. Because there is no other record of him to be found, he appears to have disappeared about that time, perhaps killed or captured by Indians or maybe he simply left home to make his way in the world as many young men did.

Marmaduke Swearingen’s Rise to Fame as Chief Blue Jacket

The tale had its beginnings in the 1870's. On 15 Feb 1877, a letter written by newspaperman Thomas Jefferson Larsh was published in the Daily Ohio Journal. Larsh was the grandson of Marmaduke's sister, Sarah. The letter told the story of Marmaduke’s capture by Indians and his rise to power within the Shawnee community as Chief Blue Jacket. A commentary or article on the same subject is said to have first been published by Larsh in the Eaton Register (OH) in 1873 although a copy has not been located. The fictitious account was repeated in 1884 in H. H. Swearingen’s Family Historical Register. Swearingen prefaced the piece with, "The following letter appeared a few years ago in the Ohio State Journal", then followed with Larsh’s words which began .... "It seems to have dropped out of the memory of the present generation of men, if, indeed, it was ever generally known, that the chief, Blue Jacket, was a white man....." For generations, descendants and others have believed the story without any further investigation or search for documentation.

It was inevitable that eventually, legitimate researchers would begin to question the tale’s validity because of inconsistencies with known historical data. During my own research, I came across the record of births of the children of John Swearingen and wife Catherine. The Bible record states that Marmaduke Swearingen was born in 1763. This was less than ten years before Blue Jacket became Chief of the Shawnee. It is ridiculous to think that the Shawnee Tribe would make a young white boy their chief. My examination of John Swearingen’s will written on August 3, 1784 and probated on September 6, 1784 in Fayette County, Pennsylvania showed that he had provided for a slave for the use of his son "Marmonduke". It seems reasonable to believe then that Marmaduke’s disappearance probably occurred about that time.

Further study of the known data on Chief Blue Jacket reveals no proof or even a suggestion that he was a white man. Of Thomas Larsh’s motivation in creating the story, historian and author Mr. Robert Van Trees states, "Ego may have provided a thrust to his self-serving commentary--his grandfather, Charles Larsh, had been involved in a romantic wilderness adventure wherein Paul Larsh, father of Charles, snatched Mrs. George Kincaid from death at the Indian's stake in about 1758 and carried her down the Miami, down the Ohio, and up to Kaskaskia where he married her--Charles was born to this union a year later. After moving east to southwestern PA, and settling near the Swearingen wilderness tract of land northeast of present-day Point Marion, PA, Charles met and married in 1781, Sarah Swearingen, older sister of Marmaduke. The grandson of this union, Thomas J. Larsh (1809-1883), was enamored with the Indian's way of life and he named three of his sons White Cloud, Black Hawk, and Blue Jacket--the latter died in a prisoner's camp during the Civil War."

In his book, Banks of the Wabash, Van Trees presents additional proof that not only was Blue Jacket not Marmaduke Swearingen, but also that Blue Jacket did not kill his brother, Charles Swearingen in the defeat of Arthur St. Clair’s army in 1791, as stated by Allan Eckert in his books. My own research indicates that Charles Swearingen was not even a participant in the battle. He had married Nancy Pottenger in December of 1788 and in 1800, years after Charles was said to have been killed, he and Nancy were living in Mason Co, KY. The only known Swearingen to have been killed at St Clair’s defeat was Captain Van Swearingen, a distant cousin of Marmaduke.

Because of his extensive research, Van Trees has become the foremost authority on the Blue Jacket family and the historical events of Chief Blue Jacket’s lifetime. His article, Fact, not fiction: Marmaduke Swearingen, Shawnee War Chief?, was published in the Mercer County Chronicle, 6 Sep 1990 [Vol 84, No 36, Coldwater, OH]. Van Trees’ book, Banks of the Wabash, 2002, 3rd. rev., is available from Barnes & Noble or from the Historical Society Museum Gift Shop, One Fort Site St, Fort Recovery, OH 45846.

In 1999, Van Trees instigated a DNA test, personally gathering the necessary specimens from Blue Jacket and Swearingen descendants. The testing was carried out at Wright State University by Dr. Dan Krane, Associate Professor of Biology. Results show there is no genetic link between the two lineages (Dayton Daily News, 12 Jun 2000). Van Trees has contributed information to the Blue Jacket family internet website mastered by Blue Jacket blooded cousins, Winston Charles Bingham and Gaylord Carlyle Hinshaw. Descendants of Blue Jacket are members of the Cherokee Nation (Adopted Shawnees) of Tahlequah OK, Eastern Shawnee Tribe of West Seneca OK and the Shawnee Tribe of Miami OK.

In 2000, Mr. Hinshaw filed a report to the Library of Congress, "Defending Blue Jacket from the Depredations of the White Men", protesting the inaccuracies presented in the Blue Jacket Outdoor Drama, performed each year in OH. His protest was accompanied by a number of others authored by other Blue Jackets, including one by the Eastern Shawnee Tribe Elder of the Year, Robert Denton Blue Jacket. The play had recently been accepted into the Library of Congress’ Local Legacy project, although the author’s portrayal of Marmaduke Swearingen having become Chief Blue Jacket appears to have been taken directly from the original, totally inaccurate, Larsh story, with the added embellishment of Blue Jacket having killed his brother Charles in 1791.

A number of other respected historians, including Dr. Ray Crain of Ohio, have researched the issue and his findings have been accepted by the Ohio Historical Society. Louise Franklin Johnson researched the story for her paper in 1992, Six Men Named Van Swearingen And Their Fathers. Helen Hornbeck Tanner researched Blue Jacket in the late 1960's, concluding then that Blue Jacket was not a white man. Ms Tanner is a Senior Research Fellow at the Newberry Library in Chicago, IL, a private research library with an exceptionally fine genealogical collection and a Center for the History of American Indians. And, historical author John Sugden has written an excellent biography, Blue Jacket, Warrior of the Shawnees, published in 2000 by University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, NE.

August 3, 2001, 224 Heathwood Dr., Aiken SC 29803.

Updated October 30, 2002.

This article was written for the following website of the Blue Jacket family: http://www.shawnee-tribe.org/Blue Jacket.htm

Karel L. Whyte recently passed away and is sorely missed.  Karel was an astute historian and contributed a great deal to the chronicling of pioneer times.  She authored  SWEARINGEN/VAN SWEARINGEN and RELATED FAMILIES, 2002, privately published, LCCN: 97191585

Massasoit
photo by Hal Sherman


Above is Massasoit and Chelsea, Hal Sherman's grand daughter. The statue is located in the lobby of the Dayton Art Institute in Dayton, Ohio.

Massasoit was the Indian that dealt with the Pilgrims and celebrated the first Thanksgiving with them.

Cyrus E. Dallin, created other splendid Indian figures such as the Signal of Peace, Medicine Man, The Protest, and my favorite Appeal to the Great Spirit.



Wyandot Indians
and what Blue Jacket saw.
by Hal Sherman

What Blue Jacket would have looked at as the boats passed on the Detroit River.


"The Execution of Leatherlips"
by Hal Sherman
July 3, 2002

In June of 1810 the Prophet and Tecumseh ordered Roundhead and his warriors to go and kill the Wyandot Chief Leatherlips for witchcraft. The reason was because he was loyal to the Americans. You can view him singing his death song before his recently dug grave. Click here to view painting.


TRUE HERITAGE
Bellefontaine OH.
January 28, 2002

Today, the Bellefontaine Examiner published the first of six daily articles written by Staff Writer Brian J. Evans exploring the uncovering of the truth of a long standing tale about an Indian and a white.

Indian Territory
February 3, 2002 
Today, the Pen and Pencil of the Shawnee-Blue Jackets comments on Brian J. Evans series on the uncovering of a false tale that Blue Jacket, the last principal War Chief of the Shawnee Tribe, was a white man with nary a drop of Indian blood in his veins.

Brian did good for a wet behind the ears, small town journalist who dug up and presented a great deal of information about an old and awfully false tale. His presentation leaves many questions to the reader’s imagination but the work done to show the tale as being totally false is adequately covered. The hero’s are the dedicated researchers, serious authors and descendants of the two men involved.

A part missing is the importance of truth in family heritage. The history of both families involved was slammed by authors using the tale as a true story for their own aggrandizement, even adding equally false events.

Read it and give the author and publisher some feedback. The Bellefontaine Examiner is an afternoon, local newspaper and its circulation is already limited. Their penchant for publishing this type of article is admiral. Hopefully, the Pen and Pencil will make them famous!

Brian Evans, Staff Writer bevans@examiner.org
Jim Mason, Editor
jmason@examiner.org


BLUE JACKET
A WARRIOR IN SHADOWS


Brian Evans, staff writer,  Bellefontaine Examiner holds copy of January 29, 2002 newspaper,  2nd in series of six articles re "The legend of Blue Jacket." published 28 Jan thru 2 Feb.   

We would like to thank Mr. Evans for the kind permission to post this article on the Blue Jacket P&P


The legend of Blue Jacket aka Wayapiersenwah

The General Assembly of the State of Ohio commissioned Howard Chandler Christy, an Ohio artist, to paint The Signing of the Treaty Of Greeneville. He painted it in 1945 and it hangs in the east wing of the Ohio State Capital Building in Columbus. Blue Jacket was represented, near the left of the painting, and is wearing sort of a blue military coat.

By Brian J. Evans
Examiner Staff Writer


The Legend

For some people, it's hard to imagine; to visualize the indigenous natives of the Northwest Territory when western civilization began inhabiting its wild countryside.

Through historical books, people are able to catch a brief glimpse of the way these natives lived and how they fought to preserve their heritage.

For about nine years, one remarkable native, Chief Blue Jacket, a warrior of the Shawnee Indians, made his home in the area where Bellefontaine is located today.

During that time, and after, he led a conglomeration of Indian tribes into several battles against white expansion.

Today, because of sparse documentation, the life of this historical figure is obscure.

His importance on the battlefield has been underestimated and his background has been misunderstood.

Regardless, Blue Jacket was one of the most successful Shawnee warriors.

Long after his death, numerous historical authors have written about the renowned chief. Stories about Blue Jacket have been published countless times.

Many of these publications have depicted Blue Jacket as a young white captive turned Shawnee war chief.

The story of this white captive has made it to Ripley's Believe it or Not! and Paul Harvey's The Rest of the Story.

According to the tale, Blue Jacket's name was Marmaduke or "Duke" Van Swearingen. While out hunting with his brother during the Revolutionary War, Marmaduke was captured by a group of Shawnee Indians at the age of 17.

After a short period of time, the Indians accepted him as one of their own. Soon, the young man became their leader, eventually even killing his own brother in battle.

Or so one side of the story claims ...

Since the publication of local author Allan Eckert's nationally acclaimed Blue Jacket: War Chief of the Shawnees, in 1967, the disputed life of Blue Jacket has developed into a controversy.

As genealogist and author Richard Pangburn wrote it in his book, Indian Blood II, "Allan W. Eckert made the 'fact not fiction' claim about Marmaduke Van Swearingen and started a war - the Blue Jacket war."

Mr. Pangburn has since recanted that statement and now believes "that it was (genealogist and author Robert) Van Trees who started and continues this war fought by Van Trees and now ( Blue Jacket descendent Carlyle) Hinshaw against all books and plays which do not see history the way they do."

This controversy or so called "war" began in Ohio and has spread across the continent, even into Europe.

It's an academic issue that many take personally.

Long after Marmaduke Swearingen and/or Blue Jacket died, historians, genealogists and descendants of the two men, have spent decades researching the tale, finding evidence that Marmaduke Van Swearingen and the famous Shawnee war chief Blue Jacket weren't the same man.

Today, numerous historians and writers on the subject agree - they weren't the same person. They say Blue Jacket wasn't even a white man.

He was born and raised a Shawnee Indian.

The story of him being a white man can be traced back to a single publication. From there, after several other publications, it snowballed into what some historians consider a great misconception.

"I agree that stories of white captives identifying with Indians, though not uncommon in the late 18th Century, have interest for us," commented historical biographer John Sugden from his home in England. "But then the real story, Blue Jacket's story, of an Indian who learned much about the whites, far more than most of his native contemporaries, is also unusual."

Dr. Sugden, who in 2000 published what several historians consider a more accurate book on Blue Jacket, Blue Jacket: Warrior of the Shawnees, has done extensive research on the Shawnee chief and has worked with other historians to straighten out the facts.

A graduate of Leeds, Lancaster and Sheffield Universities in England, Dr. Sugden has a doctorate in modern history.

He has conducted research in more than 50 archives worldwide and written 60 articles and book reviews in various academic journals and periodicals. He wrote Tecumseh's Last Stand, 1985; Tecumseh, A Life, 1998; and Blue Jacket, 2000.

His awards include the 1999 Distinguished Book Award of the Society for Military History for Tecumseh, A Life and the 2001 Ohioana Book Award for Blue Jacket.

"We are not talking about some backwoods yokel here. Blue Jacket was a remarkably sophisticated character. To defend the Ohio country he and his associates had to unite fragmented native communities and manage armies of warriors, rather than the usual small war parties. He always had an eye for what he could borrow from the whites, for what might be useful to him," Dr. Sugden added.

Today, many ask what is the truth about Blue Jacket?

The truth is still being uncovered. The truth about the past, as Mr. Pangburn put it, is "just this great big jigsaw puzzle. We put it together one piece at a time, try pieces on for size, turn them this way and that. The puzzle is never complete because one puzzle just leads to other puzzles."

Blue Jacket was probably born in Pennsylvania about 1740, although some argue he was born several years before that. He was originally called Sepettekenathe or "Big Rabbit." Sometime before 1778, in accordance with Shawnee tradition, he adopted the adult name Wayapiersenwah or "Whirlpool," says Blue Jacket descendant Carlyle Hinshaw.

By as early as 1754, he was generally known to both Indians and whites as Blue Jacket.

He likely belonged to the Pekowi division of the Shawnees and by as early as 1772, he was a war chief of the Upper Scioto Shawnees, where he had a village along Deer Creek.

From about 1777 until General Benjamin Logan's defeat in 1786, his town was located where Bellefontaine is today.

As the principal Shawnee war chief, he led a zealous intertribal confederacy that defended the Ohio country during the wars of 1786-95.

In the defeats of Harmar and St. Clair, he was a premier leader. After the defeat at Fallen Timbers in 1794, he helped set up the Treaty of Greenville for General Wayne.

Thereafter, he influenced Tecumseh and the Prophet.

There are no contemporary records of the veteran war chief's death. The widely accepted date of his passing is between 1808 and 1810, in a village by the Detroit River.

Because few Indians could resist Euro-American forces or inflict losses as successfully as Blue Jacket did, his record stands out today.

Few Indians were able to influence such large numbers of Indians belonging to tribes or groups other than their own.

His prowess as a warrior rested on his comprehensive connections and familiarity with whites. He lived a sophisticated lifestyle, building substantial, well-equipped houses. His children were educated in white schools and learned English. He even owned a store.

Blue Jacket was among the first of his people to raise stock and build houses similar to those of the whites. He slept in a four-poster bed, dining with silver cutlery.

He was a trader, who would buy goods in Detroit then sell them to the Indians for profit.

He was an intelligent, strong entrepreneur and diplomat and was one of the greatest Shawnee war chiefs.

It was over two centuries ago, that this legendary warrior walked the thick, wooded frontier where Bellefontaine and numerous other towns in Ohio are located today. And now, because of a controversial story, his presence is still felt by many.

"Blue Jacket's achievements as a great warrior and diplomat stand whether he was white or Indian. Few men on the frontier at that time, of whatever race, could boast such a career," Dr. Sugden concluded.


Historical Letter



 


Feb 03, 2002


Special thanks to Marylen Williams of Tulsa OK for being so kind to loan the Blue Jacket Web Site the above certificate so we could scan and proudly display it.

A HISTORICAL CRITIQUE

by

G. Carlyle Hinshaw
1713 Baron Drive
Norman OK 73071
405-364-4584

bjexploration@swbell.net

BELLEFONTAINE EXAMINER

Monday, January 28, 2002
Staff Editorial

In honor of a great Shawnee war chief, Blue Jacket

By Brian J. Evans
Examiner Staff Writer

"My son, you are now flesh of our flesh and bone of our bone. By the ceremony which was performed this day, every drop of white blood was washed out of your veins; you are taken into the Shawnee nation and initiated into a warrior sept; you are adopted into a great family and now received with great seriousness and solemnity in this room and presence and place of a great man."  Read entire story.


 

WILDCAT BIRTHDAY PARTY

was at

WICHITA KANSAS

on

DECEMBER 29 2001

 

GAYLORD CARLYLE HINSHAW

now an aged 68 and failing, failed again

 

DIRECTOR OF FUN AND GAMES

Patricia Lou (Stephens) Hinshaw

 

 

Times Past


Kickapoo winter house. Woven mats o flag reeds keep this house warm and waterproof. A wooden mortar and pestle for grinding corn can be seen at the left. Shawnee Reservation, Oklahoma.
Click here for larger picture

 

  Creating Art for History’s Sake
With help from Charles Goslin, the frontier lives again

Artist Charles Goslin of Shawnee would rather talk about history than about himself.

He says that being an artist has a broad

 
definition. In keeping with this idea, Goslin uses a varied palette – watercolor, acrylics, sculpture – to bring frontier history to life wherever he goes.

A graduate of the Kansas State Art Institute and a retired Hallmark artist, Goslin says history and art entered his life almost concurrently.

In 1959, Charles Goslin involved himself in Shawnee town history by fighting to preserve one of its historic buildings – the Wagon Master’s House.

Built in the 1850s as a home for the Santa Fe Trail wagon master, Dick Williams, and his Shawnee Indian wife, Margaret, the house was nearly demolished to make parking space for a nearby store.

“I saw this beautiful house being threatened and I made friends with the folks who were threatening it,” Goslin says.

The artist’s friends delayed demolition for eight months while Goslin preserved the home in his paintings and arranged for its stones to be numbered and moved to Shawnee Mission Park. His research on the house uncovered stories about other figures in frontier Shawnee town, beginning a relationship with history that he calls “a romance that I’ve enjoyed all through the years.”

Goslin actively supports Old Shawnee Town, where other historic buildings, moved and rebuilt, preserve the feel of the old frontier town. He brought more of the town’s stories to life in a 90-foot mural at City Hall, which includes Shawnee Indian Chief Blue Jacket and six of Blue Jacket’s 23 children. And Goslin recently was commissioned to sculpt Chief Blue Jacket for Herman Laird Park.

“Because although he wore many hats, the primary thrust of the sculpture is parenting,” says Goslin, who notes that the statue will include two of the chief’s children. “We know from accounts that he took time every day to read to those children and that he counseled them.”

Goslin’s passion for historical heroes enlivens his art, and history, for others. With paintings of historical scenes in the National Frontier Trails Museum, the Hollenberg Station Museum, National Parks Service interpretative sites and in several towns, Goslin shows the world the history he sees behind everyday life.

Story by Rosanne Catalano
Photo by Jim Hagans
Sent by
Hal Sherman

 

SHAWNEE PICTURES
by Hal Sherman
 

Today Joan and I decided to take a little drive up Greenville way and had a serving of three of those delicious Maid Rite's and tried to count all of the Gum that is pasted on the building for entertainment. It has to be in the thousand's.
 
While there I took the opportunity to photo a few historical things, the real reason I told her I would take her there.


The Treaty Picture carved on granite stone.


Tecumseh and the Prophet's Village Marker.


The Anthony Wayne's Council House.


Annie Oakley's statue.

 

Hal made a trip to Shawnee Country  in Ohio and snapped a few photo's (below) of some site signs, Wapatomica, Blue Jacket's Town, McKee's Town, and Myeerah's Trail. Hal said "it's a scenic area around Bellefontaine". He notice the Indians always picked out beautiful locations for there villages.
 
Hal said he will try to get down to Point Pleasant this Spring and get a photo of Cornstalk's Monument and some of the sites along the Scotia on the Pickaway Plains. Another beautiful area Hal mentioned is along the Tuscorawas where the Delaware and Mohican called home for a while.


 

(03/01/02)

Yesterday when I was out I stopped at Hardin where Colonel Hardin was killed while on his peace mission in Indian country for Washington and took a photo of the stone commemorating it and noticed the Shawnee's stopped there when leaving this area.

Hardin is not very large and I also noticed the sign outside a small store building which struck me funny.

 

Also attached is the other side of McKee's Sign  that I sent yesterday which has a different  saying on it.

 

 

March 22, 2002 -- Today while visiting  Xenia, Ohio which is about 10 miles from the home of that old pioneer Robert Vantrees, I headed out North of town a few miles to Old Town and photographed a few of the stone monuments located there. I tried to run the gauntlet that Kenton did but didn't make it. I guess I'm a little out of shape. Ha. Ha.

 


 

Molly Pitcher
by: Chelsea Moyer
 


Chelsea
PJPAWS14@aol.com
Granddaughter of Hal Sherman

 

Hi, I am Mary Ludwig Hayes McCauly. But, many of you know me as "Molly Pitcher." Being an artillery wife is hard work, especially if you are married to John Casper Hayes.  I have shared many great adventures with him such as our journey to Valley Forge.  That is where I helped out with nursing the troops along with Martha Washington. We did things such as sewing, and mending, and also entertaining.  But, where I really made my mark was in the battle of Manmouth on June 28, 1778.  On that day it was as hot as Valley Forge was cold.  So I took it upon myself to cool the hot guns and bathe the soldiers throats.

Across the bullet-swept ground, fluttered my striped skirt as I was bringing pitcher after pitcher of cold spring water.  At that time, I was earning the nickname "Molly Pitcher."  When soldiers needed water they would call out, "Molly, I need a pitcher."  I also took care of the wounded.  Once, I even had to carry my husband, a crippled Continental soldier, on my back to get him out of the way of hard-charging Britishers.  On my next trip, with water, I ran into my artillery man husband with guns on his back again.  I could do nothing, but watch him fall wounded.  Without hesitation, I ran up to my husband and pulled the rammer staff out of his hands.  This action lead to the second time a women had ever fired a cannon on an American battlefield.  Determined, I stayed at my post in the way of heavy enemy fire, bravely acting as a cannon launcher.

For my heroic role, General George Washington himself issued me a warrant as a noncommissioned officer.  Thereafter, I was widely known as "Sergeant Molly." My husband John died in 1789.  A few years later, I married a man named George McCauly.

In 1822 I was awarded an annual pension in recognition of my wartime service. I lived to be 78 years old and I died on January 22, 1832.  A flagstaff and cannon stand at my gravesite at Carlisle, Pennsylvania.  A sculpture on the battle monument reminds everyone of my courageous deed.


Indian Health Professions
Scholarship Programs
by: Scott Bingham
02/05/02

Hi Everyone,

Do any of you know of someone who might be interested in taking advantage of this scholarship?   It is a great opportunity for any college student interested health occupations.  My son Zach received one last year and basically it pays full tuition, books, supplies and a monthly stipend.

Title:  Indian Health Professions Scholarship Programs
The Indian Health Service (IHS) announces the availability of
approximately $3,750,800 to fund scholarships for the Health
Professions Preparatory and Pre-graduate Scholarship Programs and approximately $8,215,500 to fund scholarships for the Indian Health Professions Program. These grants programs are intended to encourage American Indians and Alaska Natives to enter the health professions and to assure the availability of Indian health professionals to serve Indians.  Priority categories include pre-engineering, pre-medical technology, pre-nursing, pre-pharmacy, pre-physical therapy, other medical professions.   The application deadline is April 1, 2002. Interested applicants may refer to the DASH HY-FUND (keyword search) Database website http://aspe.os.dhhs.gov/cfda/p93972.htm or click here for more information.

Scott Bingham, DMD, MPH

Blue Jacket FOUNTAIN & SCULPTURE PLAZA
Feb 2002

 

 

Contributions or gifts to the Shawnee Arts Council for the Blue Jacket Foundation are "Charitable Contributions" deductible to the extent and in the manner provided by the Internal Revenue Code.

Call the Civic Centre at 913/631-5200 for a Blue Jacket Fountain & Sculpture Plaza  Personalized Brick Order Form.  Supplies are limited ORDER TODAY!

Plans are underway to erect a life-size bronze statue depicting Chief Charles Blue Jacket - a Shawnee Indian Chief, minister and farmer in the town's early days.  The future home of the statue created by Charles Goslin will be on the northeast corner of Johnson Drive and Cody, Herman Laird Park.

You can make a charitable contribution toward the Blue Jacket Fountain & Sculpture Plaza by purchasing a brick.  The cost of the bricks are $25 (Red Section), $50 (Blue Section), and $100 (Green Section).  Have you name or message inscribed on an authentic historical brick from the former Kansas City Stockyards and placed in the new sculpture plaza.  You'll become a permanent part of Shawnee History!

The brick can be imprinted with two lines of up to 15 characters each (including spaces).

  • Celebrate your family and friends

  • Remember loved ones

  • Recognize your business, club, school or church

  • Commemorate your graduation

  • A perfect holiday, birthday, anniversary or business gift.

 

LOGAN COUNTY INDIAN
MARKER TREE
by Jim Bartlett
Cable, Ohio
Sent by Hal Sherman


Along the Ohio Trail
Sent by Hal Sherman

This is from a new booklet "Along the Ohio Trail", published by Jim Petro Auditor of State  www.auditor.state.oh.us   petro@auditor.state.oh.us  It has a lot of info about Ohio. It's called a short History of Ohio lands.  This would be a good book for the youngsters to read to get to know about The Shawnee Homelands in Ohio.

 


 

Darnell's Leap
by: Hal Sherman
01/29/02

I was over Springfield way today and thought I would go down to Clifton and view the gorge where Darnell made his leap. I walked back where Darnell was supposed to have perform his daring feat and photographed a little plaque they had on the overlook and the gorge itself. It would have taken a lot of courage to try and cross that expanse. I think I changed my mind and will pass on trying it in the spring. Hal

It will be recollected by students of history that in the year 1778, during- the Revolution, Daniel Boone, with twenty-seven others was taken prisoner in Kentucky and brought to Old Town, or Old Chillicothe, as the Shawanese called it. Through the influence of Hamilton, the British Governor, Boone with ten of his party was taken to Detroit, while the remaining seventeen prisoners were left with their savage captors.  Among the latter number was a man whose name is supposed to have been Darnell, Brave as a lion and cunning as a fox, he resolved to try and effect his escape.   One night, how it is not for us to say, he found himself in a wood northwest of Clifton.  Beneath the branches of a monarch of the forest, he paused to recruit his strength when daylight suddenly burst upon him.  Not seeming to comprehend his dangerous situation, he did not move, but coolly took a piece of pemmican from his pouch and began to devour it.  He was not unarmed, for he had stolen his rifle and hunting accoutrements from his captors.

The pemmican had scarcely been devoured when the noise occasioned by the breaking of a twig assailed his ears.  His backwoods learning at once told him that a human foot had broken the twig, and in an instant he was on his feet.  Turning and looking in the direction of the noise he saw several Indians hid behind the trees.  He knew they were Shawanese and there- fore his bitterest enemies.  What should he do?  The redskins were in his very path and to attempt to get beyond them was to court death by their tomahawks or the terrible stake.  Flight seemed the only alternative, flight in a direction directly opposite to the course he had marked out.  The savages remained behind the trees intensely watching the white man's movements.

They could have brought him down with a bullet, but such was not their intention.  They wanted him to die by fire in their village.  For a minute he surveyed his perilous position and then tightened the buckskin belt he wore.  I will run he cried, and if they catch me they must stir their stumps well.  He was no mean runner and no sooner had he started forward than the Indians sprang from behind the trees and started in swift pursuit.  The course of the prisoner lay toward the Miami, and the gorge through which it flows.  Suddenly he veered to the left and quickened his rapid pace for the savages were gaining ground.  He had miscalculated their speed and endurance and now feared that they would soon overtake him.  Presently he heard the roar of the falls and he veered still further to the left.  His present course would take him to the falls, and the Shawanese sent their best runners to head him off.  But he did not maintain his present path far, but veered again and ran straight forward.   An ash tree, which he had marked with his hatchet several years before stood near the edge of the cliff a short distance below the falls, and it now lay directly in his path. Suddenly the hunter looked back at his pursuers.   They numbered six in all, and were headed by Shawanese of no mean distinction.  "I believe I can camp Little Fox," mutters the hunter as he examined the priming of his gun.  The priming was in proper condition and he suddenly paused near a tree which stood on what is now the road leading from Clifton to Yellow Springs.  He boldly faced his pursuers and threw his rifle to his shoulder.  Little Fox saw that the weapon was directed to his breast and tried to shelter himself behind a tree.  But alas; he was too late, for the rifle cracked and the Shawanese had lost a valuable chief.  The prisoner smiled at the effect of his shot, but did not reload for with hideous yells the remaining five had darted forward to avenge the death of their leader.  Directly before Darnell lay the gorge and from bank to bank it was fully thirty feet.  Cedars and bushes grew along the edge of the cliff, while far below it rolled the historic Miami, white with foam from the falls.  The hunter was not ignorant of all these facts for he had visited the spot before, and it was photographed on his mind.  He knew the foolhardiness of an attempt to leap the gorge, and that almost certain death awaited him on the rocky bed of the Miami, but these thoughts did not arrest his progress.  He had determined to make the leap and nothing in the world could have changed his mind.  And then the thought of a lingering death at the stake urged him On.  Better, he murmured to die on the bed of the Miami, than at the stake in Old- Chillicothe...  In a moment he had passed the ash tree which stands to this day a witness of the daring deed we are relating, and the next he had actually leaped from the limestone cliff.  He had not miscalculated the distance, nor permitted a nerve to remain inactive, every one had been strained for the feat.  A moment , the brave fellow was in mid-air, and then he grasped a bush on the opposite side of the gorge.  With great exertion he drew himself up on terra firma and sprang forward again.  But he had no need-to exert himself longer for the pursuit was ended.

The Shawanese had reached the cliff and were gazing, lost in amazement upon the scene of the white man's daring deed and his form which was disappearing among the trees.  "He is more than pale face," said one of the Indians; "he is under the protection of the great spirit, for pale face nor Indian could never jump across the Chekemeameesepe. Let us no longer pursue a spirit.   We will never look upon his like again this side of the dark river and the happy hunting grounds.  Braves, back to your village."  In silence the savages retraced their steps and told to their wondering people the story of the most daring feat ever recorded.  The white pioneers could scarcely believe it, but they afterwards heard it from the lips of Darnell himself. And now, reader, if it is ever your pleasure to visit the mountain gorge referred to in this narrative, ' do not forget to view the scene of the hunter's leap, which is a few feet to the right of the ash standing near the Clifton and Yellow Springs road, a short distance below the falls.

From Ohio Archaeological and Historical Publications 1908.

 

 

 

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