Where the city of
Fort Madison, in Lee County, now is, once stood a
small fort, with three block houses. The
historic structure was close to the river, about a
third of a mile from the present state
penitentiary. During its existence this fort
experienced many stormy scenes. When it was
built, in 1808, the country round about was a
wilderness. Through the forest and up the river
the Indians spread news that the government was
erecting a fort within their territory and they
consulted together to effect its destruction.
Attack after attack was made on the little garrison,
until in 1813 the soldiers were forced to flee for
their lives. In 1817 only a tall chimney and a
covered way were left to mark the site.
It was toward the last of September, 1808, that
Lieutenant Alpha Kingsley, of the First Infantry, with
a detachment of soldiers, landed at a point above the
Des Moines Rapids, where he thought a fort might well
be established. Lieutenant Kingsley, while at
Bellefontaine, had been ordered to ascend the
Mississippi as far as the River Des Moines - or Le
Moine, as it was termed - and fix on a suitable
location for a fort.
So on November 22 he writes from "garrison at Belle
Vue, near River Le Moine," to Henry Dearborn,
Secretary of War, reporting that a place about twenty
five miles above the Le Moine, had been
selected. Lieutenant Kingsley thought the
location advantageous. It was high, commanding a
wide view, and near by was an excellent spring.
The elevated site caused him to speak of the spot as
Belle Vue, meaning a fine or handsome outlook.
His plan was to build a fort in shape like a square,
with two block houses at the corners of the river
side, and a third block house set out a short distance
from the rear side, so as to command the two corners
here. Thus the four angles were protected.
Between this block house and the wall of the fort
stood a factory building and store house for trading
with the Indians. A high fence of pickets,
called a palisade, surrounded the whole, block houses
and all.
When Lieutenant Kingsley and men arrived at this point
it was too late in the season to commence erecting the
fort, so they went into winter camp. They put up
a palisade, inclosing their camp, and passed the
winter in preparing timber. The pickets for the
palisade of the fort were of white oak, a foot or a
foot and a half in diameter, and fourteen feet long.
Black Hawk and other Indians from the Rock River
country visited the scene, to see what was going
on. Lieutenant Kingsley told them that he was
about to build a trading post, where they might get
all the blankets and whisky they wanted. But the
Indians knew soldiers would not be sent to do this
kind of work. The Sacs and Foxes were displeased
because the government was planning a fort here, and
they determined to destroy the structure.
During this winter the Indians took great delight in
frightening the soldiers. Some of the regulars
had had no experience with Red Men, and were easily
alarmed. The company was a small one, and alone
among a people whose intentions, since the treaty of
1804, were not particularly friendly. Once a
party of soldiers, while cutting timber, laid down
their muskets. Black Hawk and companions sneaked
up quietly and seized the guns. Then they gave a
great yell. The soldiers, frightened half to
death, ran to get their arms-and could not find
them. The Indians thought this a fine joke and
laughed as they gave back the weapons.
Lieutenant Kingsley and his soldiers spent a rather
anxious winter, and when early in the spring
information came from various sources that the Indians
were scheming to raid the settlements, and as the
first step would try to wipe out the soldiers, all
haste was made to erect the fort. In two weeks
the block houses were built and the pickets for the
stockade set, the soldiers sleeping on their arms at
night. On April 14 the company moved into the
new fort, where more security was afforded. Then
the garrison prepared for attack.
Quash-qua-me, the Sac chief whose village was at
Commerce (Nauvoo), across the river from Montrose,
Pash-e-pa-ho, who afterwards led the Sacs and Foxes
against the Iowas, and Black Hawk, who possessed the
medicine bag, conspired together to capture Fort Belle
Vue, or Fort Madison, as it had been christened.
They decided to have their warriors dance for the
soldiers, and thus get inside the stockade. Then
weapons, concealed under blankets, would be suddenly
used, and the garrison massacred.
But a pretty Sac maiden, who was in love with an
officer of the fort, heard about the plot. She
came weeping to the fort, and when asked by her
sweetheart the reason for her grief she told him what
the Indians were planning to do.
Quash-qua-me was one of the chiefs who had signed the
treaty of 1804, at St. Louis, and was so trusted by
the garrison that he was allowed to move about just as
he pleased. When, on the evening set by the
Indians for the attack, he and several other chiefs
appeared before the stockade they were admitted, one a
time, just as usual. Soon a great number of
braves approached and began to dance before the
gate. Quash-qua-me gave a certain signal and
they made a rush for the gate, expecting the chiefs
within would help them to enter.
But instead of finding a clear path they stopped short
right in front of a cannon which had been
unmasked. It was loaded with grape, and beside
it stood a soldier with lighted match!
This upset their plans. They saw that their plot
had been discovered. Turning to Quash-qua-me and
the other chiefs, the commander of the fort bitterly
reproached them for treachery. He ordered some
of the warriors to be searched, and the weapons
disclosed beneath their blankets proved what had been
arranged. The Indians were allowed to depart,
convinced that the white men could read their
thoughts.
Still the Sacs and Foxes, and the Winnebagos from the
north, hung around Fort Madison. Black Hawk says
that they used to annoy the soldiers by standing on
boxes and stumps and looking over the pickets of the
first camp, and doubtless they tried the same plan at
the fort itself.
The factory building was finished in the winter of
1809-1810, the soldiers being allowed extra pay of ten
cents a day and a gill of whisky per man for doing the
work. The use of a "factory building" is not
stated, but it was a department of an army post in an
Indian country.
In May, 1809, Captain Horatio Stark, of the First
Infantry, was ordered from Fort Adams, Mississippi, to
Fort Madison. He reached the frontier post the
last of August, and relieved Lieutenant Kingsley, who
was glad enough to have the responsibility taken off
his shoulders. After Captain Stark's arrival the
garrison numbered eighty-one. Life at the fort
was by no means monotonous. The Indians were up
to mischief, and an attack was likely to be made any
night. St. Louis, two hundred miles away, and
Prairie du Chien, three hundred miles in the other
direction, were the nearest points of
importance. If assistance was needed word must
be sent to St. Louis. A reply would not come for
some weeks.
The Indians got bolder and bolder. The winter of
1811-1812 was an uneasy one for the garrison under
Captain Stark. Lieutenant Kingsley had left,
probably rejoiced to escape with his scalp
whole. During 1811 the Indians killed several
whites near the fort itself, destroyed property of
trappers and traders, and seemed ready to assail the
garrison. Ensign Barony Vasquez, with twelve
men, was sent to the fort to reinforce the troops
there, and Captain Stark was ordered to put the place
in state for the best defense. Before winter
Captain Stark left and Lieutenant Thomas Hamilton was
put in command.
September 5, at half past five in the afternoon, two
hundred Indians-Winnebagoes, Sacs and Foxes-attacked
Fort Madison. John Cox, a soldier, was caught
outside the stockade and was killed and scalped.
The Indians shot fire arrows onto the fort and threw
blazing brands onto the roof, trying to set the
woodwork on fire. They burned some of the
outlying buildings, slaughtered the live stock,
destroyed corn, and all the time used arrows with
lighted matches tied to them.
The situation of the garrison was desperate. The
soldiers took off their gun barrels and made them into
syringes, through which they squirted water upon the
flames.
Lieutenant Hamilton feared the savages would await a
favorable wind and then fire the factory, so that the
blaze would leap to the fort. On the evening of
the seventh he sent a soldier to burn this building
before the Indians' opportunity should come. The
brave soldier accomplished his purpose and re-entered
the fort in safety. A few Indians attempted to
occupy an old stable, but Ensign Vasquez turned a
cannon against them, and, according to the report
published in the papers of the period, "soon made
their yellow jackets fly."
On the eighth the Indians gave up the attack and
crossed the river. Besides John Cox the garrison
lost not a man. Only one wounded.
The Indians, however, withdrew but for a short
time. In July, 1813, the post was attacked
twice, and several soldiers were surprised and
killed. The first attack was on the morning of
the eighth. A party of Indians formed an ambush
in the gully of a spring about a hundred yards from
the southeast corner of the fort, and shot some
soldiers who were after water. On the sixteenth
occurred the second surprise. This time a
corporal and three privates were the victims.
Lieutenant Hamilton had sent them to defend a small
block house he had erected to prevent the Indians from
again concealing themselves at the spring. The
guard was outside when the savages suddenly
appeared. When the corporal and his men tried to
get into the block house an Indian thrust his long
spear into the crack of the door so that the bar could
not be thrown into place. Then, while one Indian
dug out the underpinning of the building, others
forced the door. "In less than ten minutes,"
says Lieutenant Hamilton, "all the soldiers were
killed."
By this time the garrison, which numbered about one
hundred men, was getting heartily sick of the
fort. The location was a bad one, because
the Indians were able to conceal themselves in many a
gully and ditch and could easily cut off any person
who had ventured outside. Lieutenant Hamilton,
July 18, 1813, writes quite a letter to headquarters
protesting against being obliged to risk his command
in such a place and commenting on the reckless bravery
of the Indians in storming the block houses. He
asks for fifty pounds of musket powder and one hundred
shells for the cannon. He adds a postscript
saying that he hopes to hear within a month from the
commanding officer at St. Louis, and trusts an order
will come for removal of the garrison.
"If I do not hear from you by the 20th of August, and
the Indians continue to harass me in the manner they
appear determined to do," continues Lieutenant
Hamilton, "I do not know but I will take the
responsibility on myself, that is, if they will permit
me to go away. It is impossible for us to do
duty long in the manner that I have adopted."
But Lieutenant Hamilton could not wait to get word
from St. Louis. Ere September began, and while
he was thinking every day reinforcements or new orders
would arrive, the savages settled around the fort in a
regular siege. The British urged them on to
capture the stubborn garrison that had so long
resisted them. The War of 1812 was being waged,
and the United Stares had little time to spare for
Fort Madison. Supplies destined for the fort
were delayed. Lieutenant Hamilton and his men
were on the verge of starvation. The war hoop
kept them awake and on their feet day and night.
The Indians glided among the trees and through the
gullies like shadows, shooting at the sentinels and
sending bullets and arrows through the
loopholes. It was decided to abandon the fort.
A trench was dug from the southeast block house to the
river. On the night of September 3, the
soldiers, creeping on hands and knees, filed through
this trench, and into the post's boats moored at the
river. The Indians were keeping watch on the
fort, but were completely deceived. One soldier
remained behind a moment to touch a torch to the
buildings. When the Indians saw the blaze the
garrison was far down the river and safe.
This was the end of old Fort Madison. As soon as
the savages found the soldiers had fled they swarmed
into the burning structure, but found little of value.
For a long time after this the Indians called the spot
Po-to-wo-noc, meaning Place of Fire. River men
who passed up and down the Mississippi spoke of it as
Lone Chimney.
Sourced: Making
of Iowa, Chapter 17
Contributed by Debbie Gerischer, a member of the
IAGenWeb Iowa History Project
|
|