Showing posts with label Lovewell's Fight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lovewell's Fight. Show all posts

Sunday, May 5, 2019

Yellow birches in bloom.


May 5. 

Thursday. P.M. — To Melvin's Preserve.

             May 5, 2018                                                               May 5, 2019
 

Red-wings fly in flocks yet. 


Near the oak beyond Jarvis land, a yellow butterfly, — how hot! this meteor dancing through the air. 


Also see a scalloped-edge dark- colored butterfly resting on the trunk of a tree, where, both by its form and color, its wings being closed, it resembles a bit of bark, or rather a lichen. Evidently their forms and colors, especially of the under sides of their wings, are designed to conceal them when at rest with their wings closed. 


Am surprised to find the Viola Muhlenbergii quite abundant beyond the bayberry and near the wall. According to my observation this year, it now stands thus with the violets : the V. ovata is the commonest, but not abundant in one spot; the V. Muhlenbergii is most abundant in particular spots, coloring the hummocks with its small pale flowers; the V. blanda and cucullata are, equally, less abundant than the former, or rather rare; V. pedata and lanceolata rarer yet, or not seen. 

I noticed lately where middle-sized ants, half black and half sorrel, had completely removed the pine-needles from the crown of their large hills, leaving them bare like a mountain-top. 


Am struck by the beauty of the yellow birches, now fairly begun to be in bloom, at Yellow Birch, or Borychium, Swamp. It is perhaps the handsomest tree or shrub yet in bloom (apparently opened yesterday), of similar character to the alders and poplars, but larger and of higher color. You see a great tree all hung with long yellow or golden tassels at the end of its slender, drooping spray, in clusters at intervals of a few inches or a foot. These are all dangling and incessantly waving in the wind, — a great display of lively blossoms (lively both by their color and motion) without a particle of leaf. 


Yet they are dense enough to reveal the outline of the tree, seen against the bare twigs of itself and other trees. The tassels of this one in bloom are elongated to two or three times the length of those of another not in bloom by its side. These dancing tassels have the effect of the leaves of the tremble. Those not quite open have a rich, dark, speckled or braided look, almost equally handsome. Golden tassels all trembling in the gentlest breeze, the only signs of life on the trees. A careless observer might not notice them at all. 


The reawakened springy life of the swamp, the product of its golden veins. These graceful pendants, not in too heavy or dense masses, but thinly dispersed with a noble moderation. Great vegetable chandeliers they stand in the swamps. The unopened catkins, some more golden, others brown or coppery, are like living worms ready to assume a winged life. These trees, which cannot stir their stumps, thus annually assume this lively color and motion. 


I see and am bitten by little black flies, — I should say the same with those of Maine, — here on the Melvin Preserve. One eighth of an inch long. 


Brakes are five inches high. 


Poa annua (small and flat spreading in Pratt's garden), say a week. 

May 5, 2023

The sun sets red (first time), followed by a very hot and hazy day. 


The wilderness, in the eyes of our forefathers, was a vast and howling place or space, where a man might roam naked of house and most other defense, exposed to wild beasts and wilder men. They who went to war with the Indians and French were said to have been "out," and the wounded and missing who at length returned after a fight were said to have "got in," to Berwick or Saco, as the case might be. 


Veronica peregrina, Pratt's garden.


H. D. Thoreau, Journal, May 5, 1859


Near the oak beyond Jarvis land, 
a yellow butterfly,
 — how hot! this meteor 
dancing through the air. 

See May 5, 1860 ("Yellow butterflies."). and Buson:

     Butterfly
sleeping
                 on the temple bell.

See also  May 22, 1856 (“A yellow butterfly over the middle of the flooded meadow.”); May 25, 1852 (“Yellow butterflies one at a time. The large yellow woods violet (V. pubescens) by this brook now out.”); September 19, 1859 ("One flutters across between the horse and the wagon safely enough, though it looks as if it would be run down.") See also A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau, Yellow Butterflies
Am surprised to find the Viola Muhlenbergii quite abundant beyond the bayberry and near the wall. See May 12, 1858 ("Find the Viola Muhlenbergii abundantly out (how long?), in the meadow southwest of Farmer's Spring.”); May 18, 1857 (“Viola Muhlenbergii abundantly out, how long?”); May 22, 1856 (“Viola Muhlenbergii, which is abundantly out; how long? A small pale-blue flower growing in dense bunches, but in spots a little drier than the V. cucullata and blanda”); May 29, 1856 ("What a flowery place, a vale of Enna, is that [Painted Cup] meadow! Painted Cup, Erigeron bellidifolius, Thalictrum dioicum, Viola Muhlenbergii, fringed polygala, buck-bean, pedicularis, orobanche, etc., etc. Where you find a rare flower, expect to find more rare ones”)
The yellow birches, now fairly begun to be in bloom, at Yellow Birch, or Borychium, Swamp. See May 17, 1857 ("The yellow birch catkins, now fully out or a little past prime, are very handsome now, numerous clusters of rich golden catkins hanging straight down at a height from the ground on the end of the pendulous branches, amid the just expanding leaf-buds. It is like some great chandelier hung high over the underwood.”)

The sun sets red (first time), followed by a very hot and hazy day. See May 5, 1860 ("Sun goes down red."); May 4, 1860 (“The sun sets red, shorn of its beams.”); August 25, 1854 ("The sun is shorn of his beams by the haze before 5 o'clock P.M., round and red, and is soon completely concealed, apparently by the haze alone.”)

Veronica peregrina, Pratt's garden. See May 5, 1860 ("Veronica serpyllifolia, say yesterday.."). See also See May 22, 1856 ("Veronica peregrina, apparently several days.”);May 25, 1855 ("Veronica peregrina in Mackay’s strawberries, how long? “)

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

A remarkably cold, as well as snowy, January.


January 26

When I took the ether my consciousness amounted to this: I put my finger on myself in order to keep the place, otherwise I should never have returned to this world. 

They have cut and sawed off the butt of the great elm at nine and a half feet from the ground, and I counted the annual rings there with the greatest ease and accuracy. Indeed I never saw them so distinct on a large butt. The tree was quite sound there, not the least hollow even at the pith. 

There were one hundred and twenty—seven rings. Supposing the tree to have been five years old when nine and a half feet high, then it was one hundred and thirty-two years old, or came up in the year 1724, just before Lovewell’s Fight. 

There were two centres, fourteen inches apart. There were thirteen distinct rings about each centre, before they united and one ring inclosed both. Then there was a piece of bark,  say six or eight inches long. This was not overgrown but by the twenty—fourth ring. 

These two centres of growth corresponded in position to the two main branches six feet above, and I inferred that when the tree was about eighteen years old, the fork commenced at nine and a half feet from the ground, but as it increased in diameter, it united higher and higher up. 

I remember that the bark was considerably nearer one centre than the other. There was bark in several places completely overgrown and included on the extreme butt end where cut off, having apparently overgrown its own furrows. 

Its diameter, where I counted the rings, was, one way, as near as I could measure in spite of the carf, four feet and three inches; another, four feet and eight inches; and five feet. On the line by which I counted, which was the long way of the tree, it had grown in the first fifty years twenty inches, or two fifths of an inch a year; the last fifty, five and three quarters inches or about one ninth of an inch a year; and there was a space of about five inches between the two, or for the intermediate twenty-seven years.

At this height, it had grown on an average annually nearly twenty-four one-hundredths of an inch from the centre on one side. 

The white or sap wood averaged about two inches thick. The bark was from one to two inches thick, and in the last case I could count from twelve to fifteen distinct rings in it, as if it were regularly shed after that period. 

The court-house elm measured, at six feet from the ground on the west side, twelve feet one and one half inches in circumference. The willow by the Jim Jones house, fourteen feet at about eighteen inches from ground; thirteen feet eight inches, at about six inches from ground; and it bulged out much larger above this. 

P. M. —Walk down the river as far as the south bend behind Abner Buttrick’s. I also know its condition as far as the Hubbard Bridge in the other direction.

There is not a square foot open between these extremes, and, judging from what I know of the river beyond these limits, I may safely say that it is not open (the main stream, I mean) anywhere in the town. (Of the North Branch above the Bath Place, the goose ground, say to the stone bridge, I cannot speak confidently?) The same must have been the case yesterday, since it was colder. Probably the same has been true of the river, excepting the small Space against Merrick’s below the Rock (now closed), since January 7th, when it closed at the Hubbard Bath, or nearly three weeks, —a long time, methinks, for it to be frozen so solidly. 

A sleigh might safely be driven now from Carlisle Bridge to the Sudbury meadows on the river.

Methinks it is a remarkably cold, as well as snowy, January, for we have had good sleighing ever since the 26th of December and no thaw. 

Walk as far as Flint’s Bridge with Abel Hunt, where I take to the river. I tell him I have come to walk on the river as the best place, for the snow has drifted somewhat in the road, while it was converted into ice almost entirely on the river. 

“But,” asks he, “are you not afraid that you will get in?” 

“Oh, no, it will bear a load of wood from one end to the other.” 

"But then there may be some weak places.” 

Yet he is some seventy years old and was born and bred immediately on its banks. Truly one half the world does not know how the other half lives.  

Men have been talking now for a week at the post office about the age of the great elm, as a matter interesting but impossible to be determined. The very choppers and travellers have stood upon its prostrate trunk and speculated upon its age, as if it were a profound mystery. I stooped and read its years to them (127 at nine and a half feet), but they heard me as the wind that once sighed through its branches. They still surmised that it might be two hundred years old, but they never stooped to read the inscription. 

Truly they love darkness rather than light. One said it was probably one hundred and fifty, for he had heard somebody say that for fifty years the elm grew, for fifty it stood still, and for fifty it was dying. (Wonder what portion of his career he stood still!) 

Truly all men are not men of science. They dwell within an integument of prejudice thicker than the bark of the cork tree, but it is valuable chiefly to stop bottles with. Tied to their buoyant prejudices, they keep themselves afloat when honest swimmers sink.

The white maple buds look large, with bursting downy scales as in spring. 

I observe that the crust is strongest over meadows, though the snow is deep there and there is no ice nor water beneath, but in pastures and upland generally I break through. Probably there is more moisture to be frozen in the former places, and the snow is more compact.

H. D. Thoreau, Journal, January 26, 1856

When I took the ether ... See May 12, 1851

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Drifting before the wind. A coincidence at Saco Pond, 1725.

April 18

Jacob Fulham was killed April 18, 1725, at age 32 in an Indian ambush on Saco Pond in Maine. Solomon Keyes was wounded and escaped from this battle, known as Lovewell's fight.

Lovewell's Fight started as a scalp hunting expedition. In April 1725 the bounty on scalps was one hundred pounds.  Lovewell's rangers traveled more than two hundred miles to attack the Pequawkets whose headquarters were on the Saco River in what is now Fryeburg, Maine.

The expedition was a disaster. Of the 33 who started 15 died (Lovewell included) and 9 were wounded.

The Pequawkets discovered packs that the rangers had left at the northeast end of Saco pond. Taking advantage of the opportunity for an ambush, they laid a trap into which the rangers fell.

A contemporary ballad says Sgt. Jacob Fulham died while trying to save another man: 

Of all our valiant English, there were but thirty-four,
And of the rebel Indians, there were about fore score,

And sixteen of our English did safely home return,
The rest were killed and wounded, for which we all must mourn.

Our worthy Captain Lovewell among them there did die,
They killed Lt. Robins, and wounded good young Frye,

Who was our English Chaplain; he many Indians slew,
And some of them he scalped when bullets round him flew.

Young Fullam too I'll mention, because he fought so well,
Endeavoring to save a man, a sacrifice he fell; …


Governor Drummer received word of this fight and dispatched Col. Eleazar Tyng and 87 men to advance to Pequawket. "At the battlefield he found and buried the bodies of the twelve men killed there, among whom were Capt. Lovewell, Lieut. Jonathan Robbins, Ensign John Harwood, and Sergeant Jacob Fulham. He also found and identified the body of Chief Paugus, whom the Indians had paused to bury before leaving."

Capt. Solomon Keyes was one of the survivors of Lovewell's Fight at Saco Pond. 

Keyes fought in the battle till he received three wounds, and had become so weak by the loss of blood that he could not stand.   Keyes crawled up to Ensign Wyman in the heat of the fight, and told him that he, Keyes, was a dead man, but that the Indians should not get his scalp if he could help it.

According to historian Francis Parkman, Keyes escaped by canoe:

Creeping along the sandy edge of the pond,
he chanced to find a stranded canoe,
pushed it afloat,
rolled himself into it,
and drifted away before the wind.

A breeze wafted the canoe across the pond. Keyes succeeded in reaching the stockade where he found several others of the survivors.  They set out through the wilderness and arrived at Dunstable six days later.

Capt. Solomon Keyes recovered from his wounds and later moved to Western (now Warren) Massachusetts. He lived in a house "built on an eminence near the Village." He was killed at Lake George September 8, 1755 in the French and Indian war.

A grandson also named Solomon Keyes was born in Arlington, Vermont February 22, 1756.  He fought in Revolutionary war.  He moved to Reading, Vermont in 1783, built log cabin and cleared a farm on land belonging to his uncle Danforth.  In 1785 Danforth Keyes conveyed 125 acres for 33 pounds.

That same year Solomon married Thankful Lincoln.  He brought Thankful to Reading in an ox sled, having to stop several days in West Windsor, due to snow drifts.  This Solomon Keyes was Reading town clerk (1794-99, 1801-04, 06); town representative (1800); selectman and lister; justice of the peace, and known as "old Esq. Keyes."

After Jacob Fulham's death at Saco Pond in 1725 his then 8-year-old son, Francis, was taken in by his grandfather (also named Francis) with whom he lived until 1740 when he married.  As eldest son, Francis inherited all Jacob's property in Weston Massachusetts. 

Francis Fulham fought in French and Indian war, with Capt. Sam. Hunt’s expedition to Crown Point in 1755; also in the Revolution, having enlisted 6/1/78 for 1 year.  He died just shy of his 90th birthday in 1807.

Francis' son Timothy Fulham was born at Weston Massachusetts. Timothy Fulham was a private in Capt Ebenezar Bridge's Co., Col. John Whitcomb's regiment of minutemen.  He marched to Cambridge on the alarm of April 19, 1775.  At 35, he fought at battle of Bennington, August 16, 1777.  Relics he picked up at battlefield are in Bennington Museum.

Timothy lived in Sterling, then Fitchburg, Massachusetts until 1798 when he moved to Cavendish Vermont. Timothy's granddaughter Lucinda Fulham was born 1797 in Fitchburg. She was great granddaughter of Jacob Fulham who was killed in Lovewell’s fight in Fryeburg Maine.

Lucinda married Marvin Robinson (son of Ebenezer Robinson of Reading, Vermont).  Lucinda was mother of Elmer Duane (Robinson) Keyes, born 7/15/ 1838, but she died when he was only 16 months old.

Elmer was raised in the home of his aunt Eliza and her husband Washington Keyes on their farm in South Reading, Vermont.   Elmer's adoptive father, Washington Keyes was a farmer, Town representative (1859-60), selectman, lister, overseer of the poor in Reading, Vermont, and great-grandson of the Solomon Keyes who chanced to find a stranded canoe and escaped death at Lovewell’s Fight.

Thus Elmer Duane (Robinson) Keyes was the great-great-grandson of both Solomon Keyes and Jacob Fulham who fought at Saco Pond in 1725.

See May 5, 1859 (“The wilderness, in the eyes of our forefathers, was a vast and howling place or space, where a man might roam naked of house and most other defense, exposed to wild beasts and wilder men. They who went to war with the Indians and French were said to have been "out," and the wounded and missing who at length returned after a fight were said to have "got in," to Berwick or Saco, as the case might be. ”)



  • Longfellow's first verses, so far as known, printed in the Portland Gazette, November 17, 1820.

Cold, cold is the north wind and rude is the blast
That sweeps like a hurricane loudly and fast,
As it moans through the tall waving pines lone and drear,
Sighs a requiem sad o'er the warrior's bier.

The war-whoop is still, and the savage's yell
Has sunk into silence along the wild dell;
The din of the battle, the tumult, is o'er,
And the war-clarion's voice is now heard no more.

The warriors that fought for their country, and bled,
Have sunk to their rest; the damp earth is their bed;
No stone tells the place where their ashes repose,
Nor points out the spot from the graves of their foes.

They died in their glory, surrounded by fame,
And Victory's loud trump their death did proclaim;
They are dead; but they live in each Patriot's breast,
And their names are engraven on honor's bright crest.

~ a Week: It was from Dunstable, then a frontier town, that the famous Captain Lovewell, with his company, marched in quest of the Indians on the 18th of April, 1725. He was the son of “an ensign in the army of Oliver Cromwell, who came to this country, and settled at Dunstable, where he died at the great age of one hundred and twenty years.” In the words of the old nursery tale, sung about a hundred years ago,—

“He and his valiant soldiers did range the woods full wide,
And hardships they endured to quell the Indian’s pride.”

In the shaggy pine forest of Pequawket they met the “rebel Indians,” and prevailed, after a bloody fight, and a remnant returned home to enjoy the fame of their victory. A township called Lovewell’s Town, but now, for some reason, or perhaps without reason, Pembroke, was granted them by the State.

“Of all our valiant English, there were but thirty-four,
And of the rebel Indians, there were about four-score;
And sixteen of our English did safely home return,
The rest were killed and wounded, for which we all must mourn.

“Our worthy Capt. Lovewell among them there did die,
They killed Lieut. Robbins, and wounded good young Frye,
Who was our English Chaplin; he many Indians slew,
And some of them he scalped while bullets round him flew.”

Our brave forefathers have exterminated all the Indians, and their degenerate children no longer dwell in garrisoned houses nor hear any war-whoop in their path. It would be well, perchance, if many an “English Chaplin” in these days could exhibit as unquestionable trophies of his valor as did “good young Frye.” We have need to be as sturdy pioneers still as Miles Standish, or Church, or Lovewell. We are to follow on another trail, it is true, but one as convenient for ambushes. What if the Indians are exterminated, are not savages as grim prowling about the clearings to-day?—

“And braving many dangers and hardships in the way,
They safe arrived at Dunstable the thirteenth (?) day of May.”

But they did not all “safe arrive in Dunstable the thirteenth,” or the fifteenth, or the thirtieth “day of May.” Eleazer Davis and Josiah Jones, both of Concord, for our native town had seven men in this fight, Lieutenant Farwell, of Dunstable, and Jonathan Frye, of Andover, who were all wounded, were left behind, creeping toward the settlements. “After travelling several miles, Frye was left and lost,” though a more recent poet has assigned him company in his last hours.

“A man he was of comely form,
    Polished and brave, well learned and kind;
Old Harvard’s learned halls he left
    Far in the wilds a grave to find.

“Ah! now his blood-red arm he lifts;
    His closing lids he tries to raise;
And speak once more before he dies,
    In supplication and in praise.

“He prays kind Heaven to grant success,
    Brave Lovewell’s men to guide and bless,
And when they’ve shed their heart-blood true,
    To raise them all to happiness.” . . . 

“Lieutenant Farwell took his hand,
    His arm around his neck he threw,
And said, ‘Brave Chaplain, I could wish
    That Heaven had made me die for you.’”

Farwell held out eleven days. “A tradition says,” as we learn from the History of Concord, “that arriving at a pond with Lieut. Farwell, Davis pulled off one of his moccasins, cut it in strings, on which he fastened a hook, caught some fish, fried and ate them. They refreshed him, but were injurious to Farwell, who died soon after.” Davis had a ball lodged in his body, and his right hand shot off; but on the whole, he seems to have been less damaged than his companion. He came into Berwick after being out fourteen days. Jones also had a ball lodged in his body, but he likewise got into Saco after fourteen days, though not in the best condition imaginable. “He had subsisted,” says an old journal, “on the spontaneous vegetables of the forest; and cranberries which he had eaten came out of wounds he had received in his body.” This was also the case with Davis. The last two reached home at length, safe if not sound, and lived many years in a crippled state to enjoy their pension.

But alas! of the crippled Indians, and their adventures in the woods,—

“For as we are informed, so thick and fast they fell,
Scarce twenty of their number at night did get home well,”—

how many balls lodged with them, how fared their cranberries, what Berwick or Saco they got into, and finally what pension or township was granted them, there is no journal to tell.

It is stated in the History of Dunstable, that just before his last march, Lovewell was warned to beware of the ambuscades of the enemy, but “he replied, ‘that he did not care for them,’ and bending down a small elm beside which he was standing into a bow, declared ‘that he would treat the Indians in the same way.’ This elm is still standing [in Nashua], a venerable and magnificent tree.”


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