Elijah MAYFIELD - from his RWS (#S2754) pension application submitted 7 Jun 1832 Hickman Co. TN " was born in the state of Virginia in Amherst Co. in the year 1762 on the 10th day of June - where I resided until I was about 12 years of age when I removed with my parents to Montgomery Co. Virginia where I resided at the commencement of the Revolutionary War.
I enlisted in Montgomery Co. Virginia in Capt. Jesse EVIN's company of the 1st Virginia regiment under the command of Col John MONTGOMERY. I enlisted in January or February of 1779 under the above named officers in the county of Montgomery aforesaid from which place we marched to the Big Island of the Holston Riverwhere we ungrounded and remained for about the space of 30 days. We then marched down the Holstonto the Tennessee River and down the Tennessee to the mouth of the Ohio & then up the Mississippi to Illinois where we joined Col. CLARK and re-encamped at Cascaskia.
We arrived at the headquarters of Gen. CLARK sometime about the 1st of may 1779. At this place we remained until the expiration of our tour of 12 months. I was discharged sometime in January or February 1780. I returned after my discharge to Eaton's station about 2 miles below Nashville where I remained about 12 months when I was taken a prisoner by the Indians & British.
They retained me about two years and a half in captivity before I made my escape from them." Elisha Mayfield d. 1804-1843 in Maury Co. TN. After the war he lived in SC, Jefferson Co. KY, Lauderdale Co. AL, Hickman Co. TN, and Maury Co. TN. P. E. Thompsen - ptomp9719@aol.com
From: PThomp9719@aol.com BACKGROUND - JUDGE HAYWOOD'S ACCOUNT George Mayfield, grandson of James Mayfield, was kidnapped by Creek Indians on 10 March 1789 and held in the Creek Nation for many years. At the time of his kidnapping, George's father, Southerland Mayfield was killed. The earliest published account of Southerland's death was written by Judge John Haywood, in his book "The Civil and Political History of the State of Tennessee" (published 1823), at pages 248-249. Judge Haywood's syntax is a bit confusing, but his version is the one used as a basis by all the later historians, such as Putnam and Ramesy. Judge Haywood's account, with my comments shown in brackets, is as follows : "On the South side of the Cumberland the Indians did mischief also in this year. They attacked the station of Southerland Mayfield, upon the head of the west fork of Mill Creek, four miles above its junction with the east fork. They were in a body of ten or twelve men. In the evening they came to a place near the station, where Mayfield and his two sons [William and George] and another person were making a wolf-pen, together with the present Col. [Barry] Jocelyn, then a private man. The Indians, unperceived, got between them and their guns. They fired upon and killed Mayfield and one of his sons and another person who acted as a guard [a man named Martin] at that station. They fired upon the soldier and the son as they went toward the guns to bring to the pen something that was there, and jumped over a log from where they had lain behind it, to scalp them in the presence of Jocelyn and Mayfield. Jocelyn ran for his gun and got amongst the Indians, who fired upon him and set fire to his clothes, and drove him back pursuing him, a string of them being on both sides in the form of a half-moon. At length they drove him to a very large log, over which, if he could not have jumped, he was completely penned. Beyond his own expectations, he jumped over it and fell upon his back; but, despairing of taking a man of so much activity, they desisted from any further attempt and left him. He took a circuitous route, and got into the station. Some bullets, not aimed at Southerland Mayfield, had glanced and wounded him, for the Indians did not see nor follow him when he ran. He did not return to the station, however, and looking for him the next day in the direction he had run, he was found dead, by a bullet which had penetrated his body. They took George Mayfield, the son of Southerland Mayfield, prisoner, and led him to the Creek Nation, where he remained ten or twelve years. The Indians made no attempt upon the station, but went off with their prisoner and the guns they had taken. Those who were in the fort removed to Capt. Rains's, near Nashville, their situation being deemed too exposed and dangerous for them to remain where they were with any hope of safety. The Indians who committed this massacre were Creeks." LETTERS OF BENJAMIN HAWKINS The following quotations, concerning George Mayfield after his capture, are excerpts from two letters of Benjamin Hawkins, who, in 1795, had been appointed by George Washington as one of the three commissioners to the Creek Nation: 1st Letter - Dated 21 May 1797 "William Lamons lives on Mill Creek, 12 miles from Nashville; he married Mrs. Mayfield; her son George Mayfield is with John O'Kelly on the Coosa, and has been for 7 or 8 years, and was taken prisoner when his father was killed. I rote [sic] a letter of this date to Mrs. Lamons by her husband; on better information, he lives with Procter, at Pocuntallehope." 2nd Letter - Dated 30 May 1798 "I told the chiefs [of the upper towns] a young man at Epucenau Tallauhassee, by the name of Mayfield, must be ordered to visit his friends, and that the little girl at Occhois, daughter of Mrs. Williams, must be delivered to me. "They answered Mayfield had been long at liberty to go where he pleased and that he must go and see his friends." RETURN TO WHITE SOCIETY In the year 1800, George Mayfield returned to the Nashville area, married and commenced life as a farmer in Williamson County. THE CREEK WAR During the Creek War of 1813-1814, George Mayfield served as an interpreter for the commander of the American forces, Andrew Jackson. At the conclusion of the war, during the treaty negotiations which took place at Fort Jackson in 1814, George was given 640 acres (one section or square mile) of land by the Creek Chiefs. Unfortunately for him, the U. S. Government would not allow the gift. Accordingly, George made several petitions to Congress requesting that he be allowed to take title to the 640 acre reservaton. CONGRESSIONAL REPORT During the First Session of the 22nd Congress, his claim was finally given a favorable review by the House Committee on Public Lands. The Committee's letter, sent to the House of Representatives, is quoted below: "Communicated to the House of Representatives January 13, 1832 Mr. Clay, from the Committee on Public Lands who were instructed to "inquire into the expediency of authorizing a patent to issue to George Mayfield for six hundred and forty acres of land," reported: "That the said George Mayfield, in the year 1789, when he was about ten years of age, was taken prisoner by a party of Creek Indians. His father and elder brother were killed by the same party of Indians. He was adopted into an Indian family and continued to reside with them in the nation till about the year 1800, when he was prevailed upon to make a visit to his family and friends, residing in Tennessee, where he was captured, but without any intention on his part to abandon the Indians. He had during his captivity forgotten his own and acquired the language of the Indians and had contracted a fondness for their mode of life, but the influence of his friends and the stength of his returning affections for his mother and brethren finally determined him to remain with them. He soon regained some knowledge of his native tongue, has since married, and is now the father of a large family of children. "By the death of his father and elder brother, George and a younger brother inheirited a considerable real estate, but his early habits and education among the Indians had taught him to place little value on a separate property inn land and his generoud feelings toward his mother and sisters induced him to relinquish to them his whole interest in his father's estate, except eighty acres. Upon this small tract in the State of Tennessee, and near the spot where his father and brother were murdered, he now resides. "When the disturbances commenced with the Creek Indians, during the late war, the commanding general of the Tennessee troops at once thought of George Mayfield as qualified to be of great service by his knowledgeof the enemy's country and language. Expectation was not disappointed; throughout the Creek War he proved himself a faithful and intrepid soldier, and performed the most perilous and essential services as a guide, interpreter, and spy. He was wounded in the right shoulder by a rifle ball in the battle of the Horse-shoe. "Such was the high estimation in which Mayfield was held by the Creeks generally, that at the treaty of Fort Jackson, in the year 1814, notwithstanding the active part he had taken in the war which had just terminated, the chiefs of the war party, as well as those who had remained friendly to the whites, united in a voluntary request that a reservation of six hundred and forty acres of land should be secured to him in the treaty, as a testimony of their respect and affection for him, contracted during his residence among them. That part of the treaty which was intended to grant the reservation was not ratified, probably because it embraced other reservations which were not sustained by services equally meritorious or on any grounds of public policy. From the evidence before them, the committee do not believe that the proposed reservation was the result of any management or contrivance on the part of Mayfield, but are of the opinion that it was the spontaneous offer of the chiefs of the nation, as well in consideration of former attachments as of services rendered in facilitationg negotiations for peace between their nation and the United States. Under this view of the facts, the committee conclude that the claim is well-founded, and accordingly ask leave to report a bill." The above letter has been published in Volume 6, pages 346-347, of "American State Papers: Land Grants and Claims (1789-1837)." George Mayfield's claim was finally approved by both houses of Congress, on 30 January 1833, over a year after the favorable report by the Committee on Public Lands was issued. One of the principal biographers of Andrew Jackson, James Parton, in Volume I of his "Life of Andrew Jackson" (published in 1861), at pages 549-560, tells us the following: "This treaty of Fort Jackson, like every other event of Jackson's career, was subjected to unrelenting criticism in later years, and thus a flood of light was poured upon it which revealed many particulars, creditable to the commissioners, that might otherwise have been forgotten The conditions imposed upon the helpless creeks were apparently hard. ... Jackson demanded a prodigious cession of territory, ... nothing remained but for the Creeks to yield to the hard necessity of their lot, and consent to sign the treaty. Before signing, however, another scene more curious than the last occurred between the chiefs and the American officers--a scene which, in later years, was made the basis of attacks both upon the integrity and good sense of General Jackson. In the official minutes of the treaty, attested by Colonel Hawkins, and afterwards presented to Congress, I find the following account of this singular and interesting affair. On the morning of the 8th of August, the chiefs assembled and sent a messenger to request General Jackson and Colonel Hawkins to visit them, as they had something particular to communicate. On the arrival of the commissioners, some further conversation took place respecting boundaries, after which one of the Chiefs addressed the General as follows:-- "The points now about boundary are pretty well settled and we will sign it; but before we do it and yield it up, we have something to say to you. ... We, the Creek nation, give you three miles square of land to be chosen where you like, from what we are going to give up. We wish you to take it where you like, and as near us as you can; as, if we have need of you, you will be near, to aid and advise us. We give you this in remembrance of the important services you have done us, and as a token of the gratitude of the nation. "There is a man near you, Colonel hawkins; the same we give him, three miles square. ... We do this as a token of the gratitude of the nation. "There is standing by you George Mayfield, a white man raised in our own land, a good and true man, an interpreter. We give him one square mile of land near you, that you may have an interpreter at hand if we need of you to talk with you. "Here is an old interpreter, thirty years in our service. Alexander Cornells, we give him one mile square of land to sit down on, where he selects, near Colonel Hawkins, that he may continue his usefulness to us. "To this address General Jackson replied, according to the official report, that 'he should accept this national mark of regard, if approved by the President, and he (the president) might, if he would appropriate its value to aid in clothing their naked women and children. He was well pleased they had noticed their old friend, Colonel Hawkins, and his children born among them, and their conduct on this head towards him and them was much to the credit of the nation. ...' On the day following, the instrument conveying the land was drawn up by an interpreter, signed by the principal chiefs, and presented to General Jackson, who received and preserved it. This instrument ... proceeded thus:-- "First. Wishing to give a national mark of gratitude to Major General Andrew Jackson ... we give and grant him, and his heirs for ever, three square miles of land ... "Second. Our nation feel under obligations to Colonel Benjamin Hawkins, our agent, and to Mrs. Lavinia Hawkins, his wife, ...we, as a token of gratitude, give and grant to Colonel Hawkins, ... three square miles of land ... "Third. We give to george Mayfield, an interpreter with General Jackson, a white man raised in our land, one square mile of land, where he may select, as a mark of our respect for his honesty and usefulness to us as an interpreter. Fourth. We give and grant to Alexander Cornells, a half-breed, an old and faithful interpreter, who has been long in the public service, one mile square of land, at his option, to be located by him. "We finally request, that the government of the United States will ratify the foregoing acts of national gratitude, and by suitable deeds of conveyance to enable the parties to receive and hold the said lands, agreeable to our intentions as herein expressed. "... The subject was brought before Congress in 1816, when Jackson was at the zenith of the greatest popularity enjoyed by any citizen of the United States since the days of General Washington. President Madison called attention to the matter in a special message. ... said the President, ... I recommend to Congress that provision be made for carrying into effect the wishes of the Indians. "Congress differed from the President, and the recommendation was never complied with." This info from :Phil Norfleet philnorf@juno.com