Events of 1785, Wm. Hall Arrives At
Bledsoe's Lick
The gloom of despair hung like a cloud
over the settlement at the beginning of 1785. Indian foes,
incited to action by an unseen influence, were again making
frequent excursions into the region round about, murdering and
maiming as zealously as at any time during the previous four
years.
The Spanish Government, with headquarters at New Orleans and
Natchez, had so far failed in its attempts, first to win the
allegiance of the colony, and second, to destroy it by intrigues
with the savages. It now threatened to prohibit all navigation
of the Mississippi River and thereby close the only avenue by
which the settlers in Tennessee and Kentucky might market their
corn and tobacco. Such action on the part of Spain must surely
lead to ultimate disaster. Colonel Robertson was again at the
capital of North Carolina. Here he was exerting himself in an
effort to convince the Legislature of the needs of its western
settlement in order that aid might be extended. About all he
could at any time secure from that august body was its
permission to do certain things, provided always that any
expense thus incurred should be borne by the settlement, and
that under no condition should any part thereof be paid from the
State treasury.
An appeal to the Federal Government for protection against
Spanish oppression and savage onslaught was at this time and for
many years thereafter equally futile. Some excuse for this
action on the part of the latter may be found in the fact that
during most of the period mentioned its foreign representatives
were attempting to negotiate a treaty with Spain. It therefore
feared to offend that power by demanding protection for its
western frontier. Both Congress, and the Legislature of the
parent State by their acts were continually saying to the
struggling colonists beyond the mountains: "You have assumed
your present position of danger without our leave, therefore
shift for yourselves. We have enough to do to take care of our
colonies east of the Alleghanies."
Moses Brown this year built a fort two and a half miles west of
Nashville, near Richardson Creek and south of Richland turnpike.
Scarcely was it finished when Brown was killed and scalped and
his family driven back to the Bluff. A hired man who lived with
William Stuart was murdered at the forks of Mill Creek on the
farm which was afterwards owned by Judge John Haywood, the
Tennessee historian.
During the summer of this year Colonel Robertson, Colonel Weakly
and Edmund Hickman, the latter a popular man and a good
surveyor, went down on Piney Creek, in Hickman County, for the
purpose of entering some tracts of land. They were surprised by
a party of Indians and in the fight, which followed, Hickman was
killed. Robertson and Weakly made a safe retreat to the Bluff.
Late in the fall William Hall arrived at Bledsoe's Lick. He was
accompanied by his wife and children, among the latter being
William Hall, Jr., a future Governor of the State. Having sold
his possessions in Surrey County, North Carolina, in 1779, the
elder Hall started to Kentucky, but because of his inability to
get through the wilderness with his family at that time, halted
at New River, Virginia. There he bought a tract of land on which
he lived until the present year. Concluding now to remove to the
Cumberland country he again disposed of his property and pursued
his journey, reaching Bledsoe's fort on November 20. Selecting
land a mile north of the Lick he built a residence and removed
his family thereto about January I. This property has since
remained in the family and is now owned by his great-grandson,
Judge William Hall, of Gallatin.
The year 1785 was marked by the advent of Rev. Thomas B.
Craighead, a Presbyterian minister, and the first of any
denomination to make his home on the Cumberland. Craighead was a
graduate of old Nassau Hall, now Princeton University, a man of
sound learning, strong intellect and earnest piety. By the
presbytery of Orange, in his native State, North Carolina, he
was ordained to the ministry in 1780. A few years later he
removed to Kentucky and for a time preached to the Stationers
there, but again changed his residence, coming to Middle
Tennessee. It is said that this was done at the solicitation of
Colonel Robertson, with whom he had become
Gov. William Hall
acquainted in North Carolina. On
arriving at the Cumberland settlement he at once began his work,
preaching his first sermon with a stump for a pulpit, and with
fallen trees as seats for his congregation. Fixing his residence
at Haysborough, six miles northeast of Nashville, he taught
school during the week and preached on Sunday. A stone building
twenty-four by thirty feet in size was erected at Nashville, and
in this for thirty years thereafter he taught and held religious
service. The declining years of this pioneer preacher were
saddened by a trial for heresy, the result of which was his
suspension from the ministry. This order of suspension, however,
was revoked before his death. He was a man of strong character,
and while active in extending the knowledge of the gospel, he
was opposed to the revival measures which led to the formation
of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church. He died at Nashville in
1824. Throughout all his trials Gen. Andrew Jackson was his
staunch admirer and loyal friend.
During the year 1785 also the first physician to the settlement
arrived at Nashville in the person of Dr. John Sappington. The
latter acquired much reputation as a practitioner throughout the
colony.
The first lawyers in the settlement came this year in the
persons of Edward Douglass and Thomas Molloy, who announced that
they would practice in all the courts of Davidson County. A
historian of that period says that neither of these gentlemen
had studied law as a science, but being of sound practical
sense, and possessed of good business talents, and of the gift
of speech, they soon had a large clientage. The only law books
they possessed were the Acts of the North Carolina Legislature
in pamphlet form.
Early History of Middle Tennessee
Early History of Middle Tennessee, BY
Edward Albright, Copyright, 1908, Brandon Printing Company,
Nashville, Tennessee, 1909
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