ABRAHAM WOOD
The Expedition of Batts and Fallam:
A Journey from Virginia to beyond
the Appalachian Mountains, September,
1671
''Sept. 5. Just as we were ready to take
horse and march from the Sapiny’s about seven of the clock in the Morning
we heard some guns go off from the other side of the River. They were seven
Apomatack Indians sent by Major General Wood to accompany us in our voyage. We
hence sent back a horse belonging to Mr. Thomas Wood, which was hired, by a Portugal, belonging to Major
General Wood, whom we here found. About eleven of the clock we set
forward and that night came to the town of the Hanathaskies which we judge to be
twenty five miles from the Sapenys, they are lying west and by north in an
island on the Sapony River2 rich land. '' Read more
here
p.95 Patent bk. 1, pt. 2, p.590. RALPH WYATT, Gent. to Richard Johnson, Roger Davis & Abraham Wood, Planters, 21 year lease; last day of Dec. 1636. One parcell of land lying & being from Sizemores Creek & soe up the creek as farr as Capt. Buttons land doth extend, from thence up to the Rock in apamattock River, thence along the river & soe into the Baye & from thence to Seizmore his creek againe. Said WYATT, his assigns &c. shall possess & enjoy 10 acs. of the land aforesaid runing down from the Rock above mentioned. Signed: RALPH WYATT. Witnesses Joseph Fister, Daniell Lewellin.
1642 Oct: Abraham Wood Henrico Co. Oct 1642 E upon Sizemores Cr running towards Henrico Rivers & the S side butting upon Appamattocke Riv Richard Johnson 350 acs at Neck of Land June 1639 N. upon land of James Usher, E upon Main river, S towards Godspeeds Forte due per adv of his wife Elizabeth and son Francis
Letter1'1 of Abraham Wood to John Richards August 22, 1674
To my Honoured Frend, Mr. John
Richards in London, present.
That I have been att ye charge to the value
of two hundered pounds starling in ye discovery to ye south or west sea Declaro:
and what my indevors were in two yeares you was made sencible of by ye handes of
Thomas Batt and Robert Fallam in part: att my owne charge ye effects of this
present yeare I am now to give you an account of in as much brevitie as I
can.
About ye loth of Aprill: 1673:1 sent out two English men and
eight Indians, with accommidation for three
moneths, but by misfortune and unwillingness
of ye Indians before the mountaines, that any should discover beyond them my
people returned effecting little, to be short, on ye iyth of May: 1673 I sent
them out againe, with ye like number of Indians and four horses. about ye 2^th
of June they mett with ye Tom- ahitans as they were journying from ye mountains
to ye Occhonechees. The Tomahaitans told my men that if an English man would
stay with them they would some of them com to my plantation with a letter which
a eleven of them did accordingly, and about fourty of them promised to stay with
my men att Occhonechee untill ye eleven returned: ye effect of ye letter was
they resolved by Gods Blessing to goe through with ye Tomahitans. ye eleven
resolve to stay at my house three dayes to rest themselves. I hastned away
another English man and a horse to Occhonechee to give them intelligence; but by
the extremity of raine they could not bee expeeditious, so that through ye
instigation of ye Occhonechees, and through ye doubt they had, as I suppose, of
ye miscarrge of theire men att my plantations, being soe possest by the other
Indians, ye Tomihitans went away, and my two men with them, and as since I
understand ye eleven over tooke them, before they came to ye mountains, with my
letter, which rejoyced ye two English men and one Appomattecke Indian for noe
more durst to go a long with them; they jornied nine days from Occhonechee to
Sitteree: west and by south, past nine rivers and creeks which all end in this
side ye mountaines and emty them selves into ye east sea. Sitteree being the
last towne of inhabitance and not any path further untill they came within two
days jorney of ye Toma
hitans; they travell from thence up the
mountaines upon ye sun setting all ye way, and in foure dayes gett to ye toppe,
some times leading theire horses sometimes rideing. Ye ridge upon ye topp is not
above two hundred paces over; ye decent better then on this side. in halfe a day
they came to ye foot, and then levell ground all ye way, many slashes upon ye
heads of small runns. The slashes are full of very great canes and ye water
runes to ye north west. They pass five rivers and about two hundred paces over
ye fifth being ye middle most halfe a mile broad all sandy bottoms, with peble
stones, all foardable and all empties themselves north west, when they travell
upon ye plaines, from ye mountaines they goe downe, for severall dayes they see
straged hilles on theire right hand, as they judge two days journy from them, by
this time they have lost all theire horses but one; not so much by ye badness of
the way as by hard travell. not have- ing time to feed. when they lost sight of
those hilles they see a fogg or smoke like a cloud from whence raine falls for
severall days on their right hand as they travell still towards the sun setting
great store of game, all along as turkes deere, ellkes, beare, woolfe and other
vermin very tame, at ye end of fif tteen dayes from Sitteree they arive at
yeTomahitans river, being ye 6th river from ye mountains. this river att ye
Tomahitans towne seemes to run more westerly than ye other five. This river they
past in cannoos ye town being seated in ye other side about foure hundred paces
broad above ye town, within sight, ye horse they had left waded only a small
channell swam, they were very kindly entertained by them, even to addora- tion
in their cerrimonies of courtesies and a stake was
sett
up in ye middle of ye towne to fasten ye horse to, and aboundance of corne and
all manner of pulse with fish, flesh and beares oyle for ye horse to feed upon
and a scaffold sett up before day for my two men and Appomattocke Indian that
theire people might stand and gaze at them and not offend them by theire throng.
This towne is seated on ye river side, haveing ye clefts of ye river on ye one
side being very high for its defence, the other three sides trees of two foot
over, pitched on end, twelve foot high, and on ye topps scafolds placed with
parrapits to defend the walls and offend theire enemies which men stand on to
fight, many nations of Indians inhabitt downe this river, which runes west upon
ye salts which they are att warre withe and to that end keepe one hundred and
fifty cannoes under ye command of theire forte. ye leaste of them will carry
twenty men, and made sharpe at both ends like a wherry for swiftness, this forte
is foure square; 300: paces over and ye houses sett in streets, many homes like
bulls homes lye upon theire dunghills, store of fish they have, one sort they
have like unto stocke-fish cured after that manner. Eight dayes jorny down this
river lives a white people which have long beardes and whiskers and weares
clothing, and on some of ye other rivers lives a hairey people, not many yeares
since ye Tomahittans sent twenty men laden with beavor to ye white people, they
killed tenn of them and put ye other tenn in irons, two of which tenn escaped
and one of them came with one of my men to my plantation as you will understand
after a small time of rest one of my men returnes with his horse, ye Appomatock
Indian and 12 Tomahittans, eight men and foure women, one of
those eight is hee which hath been a prisoner with ye white people, my other man
remaines with them untill ye next returne to learne ye language. the roth of
September my man with his horse and ye twelve Indians arived at my house praise
bee to God, ye Tomahitans have a bout sixty gunnes, not such locks as oures bee,
the steeles are long and channelld where ye flints strike, ye prisoner relates
that ye white people have a bell which is six foot over which they ring morning
and evening and att that time a great number of people congregate togather and
talkes he knowes not what. they have many blacks among them. oysters and many
other shell-fish, many swine and cattle. Theire building is brick, the
Tomahittans have a mongest them many brass potts and kettles from three gallons
to thirty. they have two mullato women all ye white and black people they faJce
they put to death since theire twenty men were barbarously handled. After nine
dayes rest, my man with ye horse he brought home and ye twelve Tomahittans began
theire jorny ye 2oth of September intending, God blessing him, at ye spring of
ye next yeare to returne with his com- ponion att which time God spareing me
life I hope to give you and some other friends better satisfaction. all this I
presented to ye Grand Assembly of Virginia, but not soe much as one word in
answer or any encouragement or assistance given.
The good suckses of ye last jorney by my men
performed gave mee great hopes of a good suckses in ye latter for I never heard
from nor any thing after I employed Mr. James Needham 182 past from Aeno
anIndian towne two dayes jorny
beyond Occhoneeche in safty but now begins ye tragicall scene of bad hap. upon
ye 2yth of January following I received a flying report by some Indians that my
men were killd by ye Tomahitans pasing over theire river as they were returning,
now dayly came variable reports of theire miscarige. All Indians spake darkly to
hide ye trueth from being discoverd for feare ye guilt of ye mourder would be
layd upon them selves. I sent an other man out to inquire what might bee found
out of truth in ye buisness, but before his return upon ye 25th of February came
one Henry Hatcher an English man, to my house which had been att Occhone- chee a
tradeing with them Indians, and tells me that my man I last sent out was stopt
there by ye Occhene- chees from goeing any further untill Hattcher par- swaded
them to lett my man pas, which they did accordingly, this Hatcher further tould
me that Mr. James Needham was certainly killd att his goeing out, but by whome
he knew not, but as ye Occhone- chees said by the Tomahittans that went with
him, but said Hatcher I saw ye Occhonechees Indian knowne by ye name of John, a
fatt thick bluff faced fellow, have Mr. James Needhams pistolls and gunn in his
hande, as the Indian him selfe tould Hatcher. This Indian John by his Indian
name is calld Hase- coll, now you are to note that this Indian John was one that
went with Mr. James Needham and my man Gabriell Arthur att ye first to ye
Tomahitans and returned with Mr. James Needham to my house where he ye said John
received a reward to his content and a greed with me to goe a gaine with him.
and indeav- our his protextion to ye Tomahittans and to return
with
Mr. James Needham and my man to my house ye next spring and to that end receved
halfe his pay in hand. Ye rest hee was to receve at his returne. My poore man
Gabriell Artheur all this while ecap- tivated all this time in a strange land,
where never English man before had set foote, in all likelihood either slaine,
or att least never likely to returne to see ye face of an English man, but by ye
great providence and protection of God allmighty still survives which just God
will not suffer just and honest indevors to fall quite to ye ground. Mauger ye
deivill and all his adherents, Well, shall now give a relation, what my man hath
discovered in all ye time that Mr. James Needham left him att ye Tomahitans to
ye i8th of June 74. which was ye daye Gabriell arived att my house in safety
with a Spanish Indian boy only, with difficulty and hasard and how Mr. James
Needham came to his end by ye hands of the barbarious roge Indian John that had
undertaken his protection and safety and as breife as I can give a touch upon ye
heads of ye materaall matter my mans memory could retain, for he cannot write ye
greater pity, for should I insert all ye particulars it would swell to too great
a Yollume and perhaps seeme too tedeous to ye courteous and charitable Reader
soe I begg pardon for ignorant erors, and shall againe come to Mr. Need- hams,
where wee left him. from Aeno hee journied to Sarrah, with his companions ye
Tomahitons and John ye Occhoenechee accompanied with more of his country men
which was to see ye tragady acted as I suppose, it happened as they past Sarrah
river an Indian lett his pack slip into ye water whether on pur
pose
or by chance I canot judge, upon this some words past betwine Needham and ye
Indian. Ochenechee Indian John tooke up Mr. Needham very short in words and soe
continued scoulding all day untill they had past ye Yattken towne and soe over
Yattken river, not far from ye river Mr. Needham alighted it not being far from
the foot of ye mountaines, and there tooke up theire quarters. Still Indian John
continued his wailing and threating Mr. Needham tooke up a hatchet which lay by
him, haveing his sword by him threw ye hatchet on ye ground by Indian John and
said what John are you minded to kill me. Indian John imediately catched up a
gunn, which hee him selfe had carried to kill meat for them to eate and shot Mr.
Needham neare ye burr of ye eare and killd him not withstanding all ye
Tomahittans started up to rescue Needham but Indian John was to quick for them,
soe died this heroyick English man whose fame shall never die if my penn were
able to eternize it which had adventured where never any English man had dared
to atempt before and with him died one hundered forty-foure pounds starling of
my adventure with him. I wish I could have saved his life with ten times ye
vallue. Now his companions ye Tomahittans all fell a weepeing and cried what
shall wee doe now you have killd ye English man wee shall be cut of by ye
English. Indian John drew out his knife slept acrosse ye corpes of Mr. Needham,
ript open his body, drew out his hart, held it up in his hand and turned and
looked to ye eastward, toward ye English plantations and said hee vallued not
all ye English. Ye Tomahittans reployed, how dare you doe this,
wee
are all afraid of ye English. Indian John re- ployed he was paid for what he had
done and had receved his rewarde and then laid a command upon ye Tomahittans
that they should dispatch and kill ye English man which Needham had left att ye
Tomahittans and immediately opened the packs tooke what goods he pleased, soe
much as Needham's horse could carry and soe returned backe.
Now
wee returne backe to my man Gabriell Ar- ther. Ye Tomahittans hasten home as
fast as they can to tell ye newes ye King or chife man not being att home, some
of ye Tomahittans which were great lovers of ye Occheneechees went to put Indian
Johns command in speedy execution and tied Gabriell Ar- ther to a stake and laid
heaps of combustible canes a bout him to burne him, but before ye fire was put
too ye King came into ye towne with a gunn upon his shoulder and heareing of ye
uprore for some was with it and some a gainst it. ye King ran with great speed
to ye place, and said who is that that is goeing to put fire to ye English man.
a Weesock borne started up with a fire brand in his hand said that am I. Ye King
forthwith cockt his gunn and shot ye wesock dead, and ran to Gabriell and with
his knife cutt ye thongs that tide him and had him goe to his house and said
lett me see who dares touch him and all ye wesocks children they take are
brought up with fherrT as ye~IahesaryeTaTe 'armongst ye~Tjjrkes. this king came
to my house upon ye 2ith of June as you will heare in ye following
discouerse.
Now after ye tumult was over they make
preparation for to manage ye warr for that is ye course of
theire liveing to forage robb and spoyle
other nations and the king commands Gabriell Arther to goe along with a party
that went to robb ye Spanyarrd, promising him that in ye next spring hee him
selfe would carry him home to his master. Gabriell must now bee obedient to
theire commands. in ye deploreable condition hee was in was put in armes, gun,
toma- hauke, and targett and soe marched a way with ye company, beeing about
fifty. they travelled eight days west and by south as he guest and came to a
town of negroes, spatious and great, but all wooden buildings Heare they could
not take any thing without being spied. The next day they marched along by ye
side of a great carte path, and about five or six miles as he judgeth came
within sight of the Spanish town, walld about with brick and all brick buildings
within. There he saw ye steeple where in hung ye bell which Mr. Needham gives
relation of and harde it ring in ye eveing. heare they dirst not stay but drew
of and ye next morning layd an ambush in a convenient place neare ye cart path
before mentioned and there lay allmost seven dayes to steale for theire
sustenance. Ye yth day a Spanniard in a gentille habitt, accout- ered with gunn,
sword and pistoll. one of ye Tom- ahittans espieing him att a distance crept up
to ye path side and shot him to death. In his pockett were two pices of gold and
a small gold chain. which ye Tomahittans gave to Gabriell, but hee unfourtunate-
ly lost it in his venturing as you shall heare by ye sequell. Here they hasted
to ye negro town where they had ye advantage to meett with a lone negro. After
him runs one of the Tomahittans with a dart in
his
hand, made with a pice of ye blaide of Needhams sworde, and threw it after ye
negro, struck him thrugh betwine his shoulders soe hee fell downe dead. They
tooke from him some toys. which hung in his eares, and bracelets about his neck
and soe returned as expeditiously as they could to theire owne homes.
They
rested but a short time before another party was commanded out a gaine and
Gabrielle Arther was comanded out a gaine, and this was to Porte Royall, Here
hee refused to goe saying those were English men and he would not fight a gainst
his own nation, he had rather be killd. The King tould him they intended noe
hurt to ye English men, for he had promised Needham att his first coming to him
that he would never doe violence a gainst any English more but theire buisness
was to cut off a town of Indians which lived neare ye English, I but said Gabri-
ell what if any English be att that towne, a trading, ye King sware by ye fire
which they adore as theire god they would not hurt them soe they marched a way
ovef ye mountains and came upon ye head of Portt Royall river in six days. There
they made perriaug- ers of bark and soe past down ye streame with much
swiftness, next coming to a convenient place of landing they went on shore and
marched to ye eastward of ye south, one whole day and parte of ye night. At
lengeth they brought him to ye sight of an English house, and Gabriell with some
of the Indians crept up to ye house side and lisening what they said, they being
talkeing with in ye house, Gabriell hard one say, pox take such a master that
will not alow a servant a bit of meat to eate upon Christmas day, by
that
meanes Gabriell knew what time of ye yeare it was, soe they drew of secretly and
hasten to ye Indian town, which was not above six miles thence. about breake of
day stole upon ye towne. Ye first house Gabriell came too there was an English
man. Hee hard him say Lord have mercy upon mee. Gabriell said to him runn for
thy life. Said hee which way shall I run. Gabriell reployed, which way thou wilt
they will not meddle with thee. Soe hee rann and ye Tomahittans opend and let
him pas cleare there they got ye English mans snapsack with beades, knives and
other petty truck in it. They made a very great slaughter upon the Indians and a
bout sun rise- ing they hard many great guns fired off amongst the English. Then
they hastened a way with what speed they could and in less then fourteene dayes
arived att ye Tomahittns with theire plunder.
Now
ye king must goe to give ye monetons a visit which were his frends, mony
signifing water and ton great in theire language Gabriell must goe along with
him They gett forth with sixty men and travelled tenn days due north and then
arived at ye mony- ton towne sittuated upon a very great river att which place
ye tide ebbs and flowes. Gabriell sworn in ye river severall times, being fresh
water, this is a great towne and a great number of Indians belong unto it, and
in ye same river Mr. Batt and Fallam were upon the head of it as you read in one
of my first jornalls. This river runes north west and out of ye westerly side of
it goeth another very great river about a days journey lower where the
inhabitance are an inumarable company of Indians, as the monytons told my man which is twenty dayes journey
from one end to ye other of ye inhabitance, and all these are at warr with the
Tomahitans. when they had taken theire leave of ye monytons they marched three
days out of thire way to give a clap to some of that great nation, where they
fell on with great courage and were as curagiously repullsed by theire
enimise.
And heare Gabriell received shott with two
ar- rowS; one of them in his thigh, which stopt his runing and soe was taken
prisoner, for Indian vallour consists most in theire heeles for he that can run
best is accounted ye best man. These Indians thought this Gabrill to be noe
Tomahittan by ye length of his haire, for ye Tomahittans keepe theire haire
close cut to ye end an enime may not take an advantage to lay hold of them by
it. They tooke Gabriell and scow- ered his skin with water and ashes, and when
they perceived his skin to be white they made very much of him and admire att
his knife gunn and hatchett they tooke with him. They gave those thing to him a
gaine. He made signes to them the gun was ye Tomahittons which he had a disire
to take with him, but ye knife and hatchet he gave to ye king. they not knowing
ye use of gunns, the king receved it with great shewes of thankfullness for they
had not any manner of iron instrument that hee saw amongst them whilst he was
there they brought in a fatt beavor which they had newly killd and went to
swrynge [sic'] it. Gabriell made signes to them that those skins were good a
mongst the white people toward the sun riseing they would know by signes how
many such skins they would take for such a knife.
He told
them foure and eight for such a
hattchett and made signes that if they would lett him return, he would bring
many things amongst them. they seemed to rejoyce att it and carried him to a
path that carried to ye Tomahittans gave him Rokahamony for his journey and soe
they departed, to be short. when he came to ye Tomahittans ye king had one short
voyage more before hee could bring in Gabriell and that was downe ye river, they
live upon in perriougers to kill hoggs, beares and sturgion which they did
incontinent by five dayes and nights. They went down ye river and came to ye
mouth of ye salts where they could not see land but the water not above three
foot deepe hard sand.183 By this meanes wee know this is not ye river ye
Spanyards live upon as Mr. Need- ham did thinke. Here they killd many swine,
stur- gin and beavers and barbicued them, soe returned and were fifteen dayes
runing up a gainst ye streame but noe mountainous land to bee scene but all
levell.
After they had made an end of costing of it
about ye loth day of May 1674, ye king with eighteen more of his people laden
with goods begin theire journey to come to Forte Henry att ye falls of
Appomattock river in Charles City County in Virginia, they were not disturbed in
all theire travels untill they came to Sarah, w[h]ere ye Occhenechees weare as I
tould you before to waite Gabrills coming. There were but foure Occohenechees
Indians there soe that they durst
183
Arthur seems to be in error somewhere. Either the party went to the
Chattahoochee or Alabama River and descended it to the Gulf, or what is more
likely, they simply paddled down the Tennessee to some broad, sandy shoal, and
Arthur's imagination and anxiety to reach the South Sea did the rest.
not
adventure to attempt any violent acction by day. Heare they say they saw the
small truck lying under foot that Indian John had scattered and thrown about
when he had killd Mr. Needham. when it grew prity late in ye night ye Occhenee
began to worke thire plot and made an alaram by an hubbub crying out the towne
was besett with in numarable company of strange Indians this puts the towne
people into a sodane fright many being betweene sleepeing and wakeing, away rune
ye Tomahittans and leave all behind them, and a mongst ye rest was Gabrills two
peices of gold and chaine in an Indian bagge away slipe Gabriell and ye Spanish
Indian boy which he brought with him and hide themselves in ye bushes.
After ye Tomahittans were gon ye foure
Occhene- chees for there came no more to disturb them, made diligent search for
Gabriell. Ye moone shining bright Gabriell saw them, but he lying under covert
of ye bushes could not be seene by that Indians. In ye morning ye Occhenechees
haveing mist of thire acme passed home and Gabriell came into ye town againe and
foure of ye Tomahittans packs hires foure Sarrah Indians to carry them to Aeno.
Here he mett with my man I had sent out soe long ago before to inquire for news
despratly sick of ye flux, here hee could not gett any to goe forth with his
packs for feare of ye Occhenechees, soe he left them and adventured himselfe
with ye Spanish Indian boy. ye next day came before night in sight of ye
Occhenechees towne undiscovered and there hid himselfe untill it was darke and
then waded over into ye iland where ye
Occhenechees are seated, strongly fortified
by nature and that makes them soe insolent for they are but a handfull of
people, besides what vagabonds repaire to them it beeing a receptackle for
rogues. Gabriell escapes cleaurely through them and soe wades out on this side
and runs for it all night. Theire food was huckleburyes, which ye woods were
full of att that time and on ye i8th June with ye boy arived att my house,
praise be to God for it. now wee come again to ye king of ye Tomahittans. With
his two sonns and one more who tooke thire packs with them and comes along by
Totero under ye foot of ye mountains, untill they mett with James river and
there made a cannoe of barke and came downe the river to the Manikins. from
thence to Powetan by land, and across the neck and on ye 2Oth of July at night
arived att my house and gives certaine relation how Mr. James Needham came by
his death. This king I received with much joy and kind entertainement and much
joy there was betweene Gabriell and ye king, that once more they were met again.
I gave the king a good reward for his high favor in preserveing my mans life.
Hee staid with me a few dayes promising to bee with mee againe att ye fall of ye
leafe with a party that would not be frited by ye way and doubt not but hee will
come if hee bee not intercepted by selfe ended traders for they have strove what
they could to block up ye designe from ye beginning. which were here too tedious
to relate. Thus endes ye tragedy I hope yett to live to write cominically of ye
buisness. If I could have ye countenance of some
person of honour in England to curb and
bridle ye obstructers here for here is no incouragement att all to be had for
him that is Sir Youre humble servant
Ab
Wood. From Forte Henry, August the 22th, 1674.
Endorsed in Locke's hand: Carolina Discoverys
crosse the mountains by Major Generall Wood 1674
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