Includes tours of Fort Frederick and Winchester. Speakers include David Preston, John R. Maass, Ph.D., Scott C. Patchan, Timothy Shannon, Ph.D., Jim Mullins, James M. Dubik and Glenn F. Williams, Ph.D.
Information on 18th century American firearms, the Virginia back country and related material culture.
A 1763 shipment to Charleston, South Carolina for twelve fowling pieces of varied quality and price from the Wilson firm can be found in the Robert Hogg Account Books. Hogg was a merchant in Charleston, S.C. and Wilmington, N.C.
Vol 1. p31, Robert Hogg Account Books, #343, Southern Historical Collection, Wilson Special Collections Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Crate
93 Case of Richd & Wm Wilson & Compy 12 Octb
No. 1 2 fine Fowling Pieces 18/- 1/16
2. 2 Ditto 25/- 2/10
3. 2 ditto with wrot [wrought/engraved] brass furniture 30/- 3/-
4. 2 ditto Blue Barl. Silver Sights 40/ 4/
5. 2 ditto Barrels to take out & ca. 50/ 5/
6. 2 ditto Ditto & ca. 55/ 5/10
p32
No. 4 Invoice for the Nancy Capt Mitchell Continued
Amount Brought forward....88/1/5
93 a Case of Richd & Wm Wilson Brot forward 21/16
12 list Cases 6
12 Bridle Gun Locks 5/6 3/6/-
12 Setts Screw Pins 2
In addition to fowling pieces, a few entries in the same ledger contain items related to militia and sporting goods that were being imported.
Dead Game (before 1794) Carrington and Bowles. Note the "hair Shot Bags with Button" and "brass mounted Powder flask with Strings".
[p24 on the Little Carpenter for Hogg and Clayton]
#56 Trunk of Whitbread & Gifford 6 Sepbr. 1762
No. 1 6 Buckhandled Lacqd Cuttoes with Belts [cuttoe swords] 4/4- 1/6
2 6 Boiled white Ebony handles with Do 7/6-2/5
3 1 dz Cartouch Boxes 19/-
4 1 1/2 dz hair Shot Bags with Buttons 15/- 1/2/6
5 1/2 dz Ditto ...Ketches 18/ 9/-
6 1 dz brass mounted Powder flasks with Strings 15/-
7 1/2 dz ditto better 39/- 19/6
8 4 ditto without strings 2/6 10/-
9 3 neat Leather Shott Bags with brass Tops 2/6 7/6
10 2 Leather powder flask with strings 3/6 2/
11 1 dx Single Gun Worms Say Hammers 4/
12 1 dx double Do do 8/
13 3 M fine Yellow Gunflints 24/ 3/2
14 1/2 M pistol do 12/-
My recent work on the material culture of Dunmore's War is in print, just in time for the 250th
anniversary of the Battle of Point Pleasant. Copies of the Sept/Oct 2024
issue of Muzzleloader Magazine featuring this work and more are available here: https://www.muzzleloadermagazine.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=1_70&products_id=419
I am excited to announce
that some of my recent work for the Town of Wytheville Museums will be
opening soon. "The Revolutionary Roots of Southwest Virginia" was made
possible by a grant from the VA250 Commission and features artifact loans courtesy of the Virginia Department of Historic Resources from the Fort Chiswell site. The exhibit highlights the diverse role that Southwest Virginia
played in the American Revolution. The opening reception will be on September 13, 2024 at 5pm at the Thomas J. Boyd Museum.
In 1761, the second year of the Cherokee campaign, Virginia forces plodded on; recently promoted Provincial commander Colonel Adam Stephen wrote from his post at the Long Island of the Holston river (in modern Kingsport, TN):
"I have erected a square redoubt of hewed logs on a piece of very strong ground on the banks of the river, with four bastions, the exterior 120 feet. I have done this from the just sense I have of the great advantage of it will be to have a post maintained here, either by the King or Colony. It is the only advanced between Pittsburg & Ft. Prince George, commands a large river navigable to the Mississippi & not only awes the Cherokees, but several other numerous tribes of Indians."
The fort was at the end of a line of advance posts and camps that Virginia provincial forces had recently erected, departing in stages from the forts in the Roanoke valley, stretching towards Fort Loudon in Tennessee (Byrd papers, Volume 2 note on page 727)
Bryan's to Dunkard Bottom [Pulaski County, Virginia] 40 miles
thence to Sayer's Mill [Reedy Creek at Ft Chiswell-Modern Wytheville] 24
Thence to Davis' 26
thence to Stahlnaker's 25 [Marion Va/Chillhowie/ Fort Attakullakulla]
thence to the halfway spring 25
thence to the Big Island 25 [Kingsport TN Fort Robinson]
Detail from a 1766 map showing the Holston river in relation to Fort Chiswell, Wytheville Virginia
(labelled "Bird's camp in 1760"), Fort Loudon in Tennessee and Fort Prince George in South Carolina.
"A map of the Indian nations in the southern department, 1766". William L. Clements Library, University of Michigan Library Digital Collections
Portrait of Speaker John Robinson (1704-1766) Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
This fort was named for Speaker of the House of Burgesses and Colony Treasurer, John Robinson. Robinson was Colonel John Chiswell's son in law, and had invested with Chiswell and recently resigned Virginia Provincial commander, Colonel William Byrd in the lead mines named for Chiswell in modern Austinville, Virginia.
Colonel Adam Stephen's "General Return of the troops at Great Island", dated November 28, 1761, showed 744 men of the Virginia Regiment, 408 North Carolina Provincials (including 52 Tuscarora Indians) for a total of 1,152 men present at that point (Fauquier papers page 654).
Christoph von Graffenried (1661-1743), John Lawson (1674-1711),
and an enslaved man as prisoners of the Tuscarora, 1711. This drawing depicts the moments before Lawson's torture and execution at the hands of the Tuscarora in 1711.
Returns from December, 1761 show that military stores there contained: 6 Barrells of powder, 4 Casks of Cartridges, 1 Cask of Flints, 300 Weight of Barr Lead, 100 [pounds] Buck Shott, 2 Casks of Musket Balls, 20 Quires of Cartridge paper... 15,000 Weight Flower, 3,000 Weight Beef (Fauquier papers page 653).
On November 19, 1761, a 400 man delegation led by Kanagatucko, the "nominal king of the Cherokees,"arrived and sued for peace with Colonel Stephen. Kanagatucko asked for an
officer to accompany them back to the Cherokee towns. Virginia Ensign Henry Timberlake left Fort Robinson to join the Cherokee as a diplomatic hostage on November 28th, 1761. He would later return and escort Cherokee emissaries to London.
The fort appears to have been abandoned in 1762 as Virginia forces withdrew at the conclusion of the campaign, but it was later reoccupied as "Fort Patrick Henry" in 1776.