Read American Legend: The Real-Life Adventures of David Crockett Online

Authors: Buddy Levy

Tags: #Legislators - United States, #Political, #Crockett, #Frontier and Pioneer Life - Tennessee, #Military, #Legislators, #Tex.) - Siege, #Davy, #Alamo (San Antonio, #Pioneers, #Frontier and Pioneer Life, #Tex.), #Adventurers & Explorers, #United States, #Pioneers - Tennessee, #Historical, #1836, #Soldiers - United States, #General, #Tennessee, #Biography & Autobiography, #Soldiers, #Religious

American Legend: The Real-Life Adventures of David Crockett (44 page)

5
Shackford,
Man and Legend,
18-19.

6
Remini,
Indian Wars,
6.

7
Ibid, 3-4.

8
Ibid, 1. Sugden,
Tecumseh: A Life,
237.

9
H. S. Halbert and T. S. Ball,
The Creek War of 1813 and 1814
(Tuscaloosa, AL, Alabama Press, 1895), 156-57. The actual number dead was 275, not the 500 or “half a thousand” quoted by Halbert and Ball.

10
Remini,
Indian Wars,
6.

11
Crockett,
Narrative,
72.

12
Ibid, 73.

13
Andrew Burstein,
The Passions of Andrew Jackson
(New York, 2003), 94-97.

14
Remini,
Indian Wars,
15.

15
Crockett,
Narrative,
74.

16
Folmsbee and Catron, “Early Career,” 64.

17
Crockett,
Narrative,
75.

18
The account of this expedition is drawn primarily from Crockett’s
Narrative,
71-82, and Halbert and Ball,
Creek War,
266-78.

19
Hauck,
Bio-Bibliography,
21-22.

20
Remini,
Indian Wars,
61.

21
Ibid.

22
Ibid, 60. John Buchanan,
Jackson’s Way: Andrew Jackson and the People of the Western Waters
(New York, 2001), 203. S. Putnam Waldo,
Memoirs of Andrew Jackson
(Hartford, CT, 1820), 1-69.

23
Quoted in Remini,
Indian Wars,
64.

24
Crockett,
Narrative,
90.

25
Halbert and Ball,
Creek War,
269-70.

26
Quoted in Shackford,
Man and Legend,
26.

27
Ibid. Halbert and Ball,
Creek War,
270.

28
Crockett,
Narrative,
94.

29
Hauck,
Bio-Bibliography,
25. John Reid and John Henry Eaton,
Life of Andrew Jackson
(Tuscaloosa, AL, 1974), 89-91. Folmsbee and Catron, “Early Career,” 64.

30
Remini,
Indian Wars,
70.

31
Burstein,
Passions of Andrew Jackson,
102. James Parton,
The Life of Andrew Jackson
(New York, 1862), vol. 1, 463.

32
Crockett,
Narrative,
96, 31n.

33
Remini,
Indian Wars,
74.

34
Ibid.

 

 

Chapter 5: “Mounted Gunman”

Direct Crockett quotes in this chapter are taken from his
Narrative,
unless otherwise noted.

1
Remini,
Indian Wars,
75.

2
Responding to the severity of his fighting tactics in battles such as Horseshoe Bend, and his unyielding nature as a negotiator, the Indians nicknamed Jackson “Sharp Knife” or “Pointed Arrow.”

3
Remini,
Indian Wars,
75.

4
Ibid. A detailed description of the “Holy Ground” is provided in Halbert and Ball,
Creek War,
246-49.

5
Quoted in Remini,
Indian Wars,
75.

6
Ibid, 76.

7
Buchanan,
Jackson’s Way,
287-88.

8
Ibid, 77. Sean Michael O’Brien,
In Bitterness and Tears: Andrew Jackson’s Destruction of the Creeks and Seminoles
(Westport, CT, 2003), 146.

9
James L. Haley,
Sam Houston
(Norman, OK, 2002), 15.

10
Ibid, 15. Buchanan,
Jackson’s Way,
289.

11
Haley,
Sam Houston,
15.

12
Quoted in Burstein,
Passions of Andrew Jackson,
105. Parton,
Life of Andrew Jackson,
vol. 1, 512-20.

13
O’Brien,
Bitterness and Tears,
150.

14
Ibid. Buchanan,
Jackson’s Way,
291.

15
Quoted in O’Brien,
Bitterness and Tears,
150. Frank Owsley, Jr.
Struggle for the Gulf Borderlands: The Creek War and the Battle of New Orleans
(Gainsvillle, FL, 1981), 81-82.

16
On August 9, 1814, Jackson imposed the Treaty of Fort Jackson on the Creek Nation. On September 14 to October 4, 1816, he signed a provisional treaty with the Cherokees, and on September 20, 1816, he signed a treaty with the Chickasaws. There would be a string of such subjugations and treaty signings through 1820, the treaty with the Choctaws.

17
Remini,
Indian Wars,
81.

18
The Florida expedition is largely based on Crockett,
Narrative,
101-13. Halbert and Ball,
Creek War,
143-76, 280-84, also offers an extensive and detailed account of the entire campaign.

19
Folmsbee and Catron, “Early Career,” 70.

20
The expedition into the swamps of the Escambia River is based largely on Crockett,
Narrative,
115-24.

21
Hauck,
Bio-Bibliography,
26-27. Halbert and Ball,
Creek War,
280.

22
Shackford,
Man and Legend,
30.

23
Hauck,
Bio-Bibliography,
27.

24
Though Crockett calls it “The old expression,” the origin of the phrase is actually attributed to him in more than one place. See the
Dictionary of American English,
Charles E. Funk,
A Hog on Ice and Other Expressions
(New York, 1948), 36, and Folmsbee annotation,
Narrative,
118.

25
It is unclear why the men would not eat the horses, which, even in their emaciated condition, would have offered a good deal of meat. Taboo against the practice may have prevented them from consuming their own mounts.

26
See Crockett,
Narrative,
124, 17n, for a discussion of the discrepancy in his rank. Also, Folmsbee and Catron, “Early Career,” 71n.

27
Davis,
Three Roads,
34.

 

 

Chapter 6: Trials on the Homefront

Direct Crockett quotes in this chapter are taken from his
Narrative,
unless otherwise noted.

1
Shackford,
Man and Legend,
33. Davis,
Three Roads,
63, 600n.

2
Ibid.

3
Davis,
Three Roads,
64. Folmsbee and Catron, “Early Career,” 71. Shackford,
Man and Legend,
34.

4
Derr,
Frontiersman,
79-80.

5
Ibid, 79. Shackford,
Man and Legend,
281-82. Descriptions of David Crockett’s physical appearance are few and not wholly consistent or reliable. Many are based on one or more of the portraits painted of him, and none of those was done before his entry into Congress. See Shackford,
Man and Legend,
appendix 4, 281-91, for an in-depth analysis. There are numerous references to Crockett ’s “rosy cheeks,” including his own comment in page 59 of his
Narrative,
and in his letter to James Blackburn of February 5, 1828, Tennessee State Library and Archives, Nashville.

6
Shackford,
Man and Legend,
34-35. Derr,
Frontiersman,
80.

7
Shackford,
Man and Legend,
35; Jessie A. Henderson, “Unmarked Historic Spots of Franklin County,”
East Tennessee Historical Magazine,
second series, 3 (January 1935): 117-18.

8
Hauck,
Bio-Bibliography,
30.

9
Crockett,
Narrative,
132.

10
Ibid.

11
American State Papers, Indian Affairs
(Washington, DC, 1832-1834). See Shackford,
Man and Legend,
37, and Folmsbee annotations in Crockett,
Narrative,
132-33.

12
Torrence,
Crockett,
12; Crockett,
Narrative,
127, 8n.

13
Robert M. Torrence and Robert L. Whittenburg,
Colonel Davy Crockett, a Genealogy
(Washington, DC, 1956), 12.

14
Ibid, 89. Derr,
Frontiersman,
89.

15
Shackford,
Man and Legend,
38.

16
Crockett,
Narrative,
135. Folmsbee notes in annotation 25 that Crockett exaggerates here, and that his judgments needed entire court approval.

17
Davis,
Three Roads,
68.

18
Arpad,
Original Legendary,
135-39. Davis,
Three Roads,
68.

19
Derr,
Frontiersman,
92.

20
Quoted in Derr,
Frontiersman,
93.

21
Crockett,
Narrative,
141.

 

 

Chapter 7: “The Gentleman from the Cane”

Direct Crockett quotes in this chapter are taken from his
Narrative,
unless otherwise noted.

1
See Crockett,
Narrative,
143, annotation 11, and Davis,
Three Roads,
73 and 601n. Crockett milks this story and uses it on more than one occasion.

2
Shackford,
Man and Legend,
47.

3
Derr,
Frontiersman,
97.

4
Shackford,
Man and Legend,
47.

5
Ibid, 48-49. Folmsbee and Catron, “Early Career,” 72.

6
Davis,
Three Roads,
78.

7
Ibid. Shackford,
Man and Legend,
52-53. Folmsbee and Catron, “Early Career,” 73.

8
The origin of this story is the book
Life and Adventures of Colonel David Crockett of West Tennessee,
ghostwritten by Matthew St. Clair Clarke. (Cincinnati, 1833). See also Shackford,
Man and Legend,
52-53, and Folmsbee and Catron, “Early Career,” 73.

9
Crockett,
Narrative,
145.

10
Quoted in Davis,
Three Roads,
76, 601n. Also see John Jacobs to editor of
Morristown Gazette,
November 22, 1884, Tennessee State Library and Archives, Nashville. Derr,
Frontiersman,
93, 276n.

11
Shackford,
Man and Legend,
48.

12
Davis,
Three Roads,
72.

13
Crockett,
Narrative,
147, 1n.

14
Norma Hayes Bagnall,
On Shaky Ground: The New Madrid Earthquakes of 1811-1812
(Columbia, MO, 1996), 28-40. Hauck,
Bio-Bibliography,
34.

15
Ibid. Hauck provides an interesting discussion on multiple meanings of the terms “canebrake” and “haricane.”

16
The account of Crockett’s trip upriver to McLemore’s Bluff is drawn primarily from Crockett ’s
Narrative,
147-54.

17
Derr,
Frontiersman,
108.

18
Shackford,
Man and Legend,
55.

19
Ibid, 55-56. Shackford describes the exact minutiae of these judgments. See also Derr,
Frontiersman,
104.

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