Stephen Trigg

Stephen Trigg
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates from Kentucky County
In office
May 1, 1780  May 7, 1781
Preceded by James Harrod
Succeeded by None (constituency split)
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates from Montgomery County
In office
May 4, 1778  May 3, 1779
Preceded by John Montgomery
Succeeded by William Doak
Member of the Virginia House of Burgesses from Fincastle County
In office
August 11, 1774  June 1, 1775
Preceded by None
Succeeded by None
Personal details
Born c. 1744
Colony of Virginia
Died August 19, 1782(1782-08-19)
Blue Licks, Kentucky
Spouse(s) Mary Christian
Residence Trigg's Station, Kentucky

Stephen Trigg (c. 1744 – August 19, 1782) was an American pioneer and soldier from Virginia. He was killed ten months after the surrender of Cornwallis at Yorktown in one of the last battles of the American Revolution while leading the Lincoln County militia at the Battle of Blue Licks, Kentucky.

A son of William and Mary (Johns) Trigg, he mainly worked as a public servant and militia officer during the early years of the frontier counties of southwest Virginia, which then Kentucky. He was one reportedly of the wealthiest men on the frontier.[1] Trigg was a delegate to the first Virginia revolutionary conventions, and was a member of the Fincastle Committee of Safety that drafted the Fincastle Resolutions, a precursor to the Declaration of Independence passed by the Second Continental Congress on July 4, 1776. He was also elected to the Virginia House of Delegates.

Trigg was appointed to the Virginia Land Court Commission in 1779, charged with settling land titles in Kentucky. He then settled in Kentucky himself. In 1782, a raiding party of Shawnee Indians led by British and Loyalist officers attacked Bryan Station, but were driven off. Kentucky militia companies then pursued the fleeing invaders. Trigg commanded half of the men, Daniel Boone the other. Ignoring Boone's warnings of a trap, the militiamen charged into an Indian ambush at Blue Licks. Trigg and many others, including Boone's youngest son, were killed. Trigg's body was later found cut into pieces.

Trigg County, Kentucky, was named in memory of Stephen Trigg.

Early life and family

Trigg was the son of William Trigg (1716–1773) and Mary (Johns) Trigg (1720–1773), whose family was prominent on the Virginia frontier. His father served as a Judge of the Court of Chancery, an equity court, and the Bedford County Court.[2] Trigg had four brothers, William, John, Abram and Daniel, who were all soldiers in the Revolutionary War. Two of these brothers, John and Abram, later represented Virginia in the U.S. Congress. Stephen married Mary Christian, daughter of another Virginia pioneer, Israel Christian. Trigg lived the early part of his life in southwest Virginia and ran a tavern in Botetourt County.[3]

Trigg and his wife had three sons and two daughters. His daughter Mary married General David Logan, and was the mother of was Stephen Trigg Logan, who would serve in the Illinois state legislature and become Abraham Lincoln law partner in Springfield, Illinois.[4]

Virginia pioneer

Location of Fincastle, Virginia

The western county of Augusta in Virginia could no longer serve the needs of the far flung pioneers along the New River, and so in 1769, the county of Botetourt was created.[5] Trigg was one of several appointed as its first justices of the peace,[5] which was a judge presiding over misdemeanors and other civil cases. From 1770 to 1771, he served as magistrate, Justice of the County Court in Chancery and a Justice of Oyer and Terminer, which was a criminal court.[6] When the town of Fincastle, Virginia was forming in 1770, Trigg was instrumental in its development, helping to sell lots and build the town's prison along with a courthouse with his father-in-law, Israel Christian.[7]

Due to the needs of a growing population, the southwestern half of Botetourt County was separated in 1772 and named Fincastle County.[8] Trigg was installed as one of its first justices of the peace.[9] He was also made a Justice of the County Court in Chancery and a Justice of Oyer and Terminer in addition to his appointment as Deputy Clerk and surveyor of the road from New River to the Sinking Spring.[10] Trigg also continued pursuing his livelihood as a merchant at Dunkard Bottom in present-day Pulaski County. From 1773 to 1774, he partnered with David Ross and operated a community store in New Dublin, with branches located in Meadow Creek, Reed Creek and Reed Island.[11] At this time, many indentured servants came to this area of the state. Short of money, they sold themselves to the ship owners for passage to America for a term of servitude that gained them land and tools upon completion. In October, Trigg advertised the sale of 30 white indentured servants at his home with a discount for "ready money".[12] Trigg also served as a delegate to the last session of the Virginia House of Burgesses in 1775, representing Fincastle County, but he absented himself to serve as a captain in Dunmore's War.[13]

Settlers again agitated for another split, and so Fincastle County was split into three counties and became defunct in 1776; the new counties were Montgomery, Washington and Kentucky.[14] Trigg was again a member of the first court of justices held for a new county, this time Montgomery.[15] He also served in the Virginia House of Delegates in 1778.[16]

Early Kentucky pioneer

The new Virginia counties were growing rapidly, and with this growth came trouble. Trigg was appointed as one of the judges to the Virginia Land Court commission of 1779–80 charged with settling land disputes in Kentucky County, Virginia. The Virginia Land Act of 1779 had set up this court of four judges in order to examine the numerous land claims and to certify valid titles.[17] The four judges arrived at St. Asaph in October and triggered emigration to Kentucky as people wished to either certify their claims or seek unclaimed land.[18] They closed their court on February 26, 1780, and prepared to return home. However, in March they were told that they had to reopen the court and stay through April, as claimants were delayed due to weather. Trigg and two fellow judges reconvened on April 16 and heard another 134 cases.[19] In all, the court judged 1,328 claims covering over 1 million acres (4,000 km²) of land.[20] After these sessions ended, Trigg stayed and established his home on 1,000 acres (4 km²) of land at Trigg's Station about four miles (6 km) north-west of Harrodsburg in Kentucky County, Virginia.[21]

When Kentucky County, Virginia, was split into three counties in 1780, Trigg was made lieutenant colonel for the new county militia of Lincoln.[22] He also continued his public service by being one of the first justices of the peace, was one of the trustees to lay out Louisville, and served in the Virginia House of Delegates by representing Kentucky County in the 1780–1781 session.[23] It was during this session that he, along with his fellow delegate John Todd, secured passage of the act that allowed the formation of Louisville.[24]

Despite the growth of settlement in Kentucky, white colonists there were far from secure. Historian Virginia Webb Howard wrote of this era:

This was the darkest and most critical period in the history of the early Kentucky settlements. It must be remembered that the settlement of Kentucky was much different from the settlement of most of the other places where the new colony joined the older settlements. Kentucky, instead of adjoining already settled districts, was like an island in the wilderness. There were more than two hundred miles of forest between the settlements of Kentucky and the settlements of the older states.[25]

Trigg continued his service in the militia throughout this period. In 1781, he was made colonel of the Lincoln County militia.[26] In 1782, the four delegates to the Virginia General Assembly from Kentucky pushed for Trigg's recommendation as one of the assistant judges to the newly created Supreme Court for Kentucky, but his early death prevented him from taking this position.[27]

Revolutionary War

Meanwhile, events had moved from local agitations against the British crown to outright war. Early on, Trigg served in local militias, but he also represented Fincastle in the Virginia Conventions. These were five political meetings that started after Lord Dunmore, the governor of Virginia, had dissolved the House of Burgesses after its delegates expressed solidarity with Boston, Massachusetts, where the harbor had been closed by the British. Trigg was at the first convention in 1774 and was elected a delegate to the second convention in 1775, though he did not attend. He was elected to the third convention (July–August 1775), and did appear. He was also a delegate to the Fourth Convention (December 1775 – January 1776), but did not attend.[28]

His other revolutionary activity at the time was as a member of the Fincastle County Committee of Safety, an outgrowth of the Virginia Committee of Correspondence. The Virginia Committee of Correspondence was formed on March 12, 1773, and requested each county to do the same. The British refused to address the issues that were of greatest concern to the colonists, and so the freeholders of Fincastle County met at the Lead Mines on January 20, 1775, forming a Committee of Safety in which Trigg was a member. They were one of the first to respond to the request of the Virginia Committee of Correspondence to form such a body.[29] Committees of Safety basically served as provisional governments for their area.[30] It was also at this meeting that they drew up the Fincastle Resolutions, which was a precursor to the Declaration of Independence issued by the Second Continental Congress on July 4, 1776; Trigg was one of the signatories.[14] The resolutions, addressed to the Virginia members of the Continental Congress, contained the boldest assertion of the grievances and rights of the American colonies.[31] In February 1775, he wrote to his brother-in-law William Christian, suggesting they call another meeting of the freeholders to elect their delegates to the second Virginia Convention.[32] With the news that William Christian was leaving with the Fincastle militia company to Williamsburg to fight, Trigg took over as chairman of the Committee of Safety.[32] On October 7, 1775, they met to express their appreciation of Trigg, writing that "together with the most exemplary zeal and attachment to the liberties of your country, and your indefatigable industry in the service thereof, you merit and deserve our particular thanks."[33]

In 1776, Cherokees entered the war with the aim of driving colonists from their lands, which meant the people living in southwestern Virginia were facing British-armed Cherokees. The members of the Committee of Safety met at Fort Chiswell on June 11, 1776, and drafted a letter to Oconostota and Attacullaculla, chiefs of the Cherokee nation, to meet with them and come to terms for a peace agreement. The letter mentions the colonists' dissatisfaction with Britain:

It is true that an unhappy Difference hath subsisted between the people beyond the great water, and the Americans for som [sic] years, which was intirely [sic] Owing to some of the great Kings Servants who wanted to take Our money without Our Consent, and otherwise to treat us, not like Children, but Slaves, which the people of America will not submit to.[34]

Trigg was one of the signers of this letter.[35] The conflict with the Cherokees was called the Christian Campaign (presumably from Col. William Christian's last name) and Trigg was the paymaster in 1776–1777.[36] In 1777, he was tasked with making a list of men who swore allegiance to several militia companies. By May 1778, the inhabitants along the New River had either left or were ready to leave at a moment's notice, due to increased hostilities with the Shawnee in the area.[37] William Preston, an officer in the militia, felt exposed on the frontier, but was reluctant to abandon his home "Smithfield", not only for the safety of his family, but also for the county records he safeguarded.[38] Trigg was then leaving for his term in the General Assembly, and Preston urged him and the other delegate for a guard.[38] When it was initially presented to the Governor's Council, Preston's petition was denied, but Trigg met several times with Governor Patrick Henry about Preston's situation and won another hearing with the Council. Trigg made three separate appeals in all before carrying his point.[39] When the governor agreed to send a guard of twelve men and a sergeant, Trigg sent Preston the news and also told him of the Treaty of Alliance that was signed in France in February.[38]

Last battle and death

This headstone at the Blue Licks Battlefield State Park marks the mass grave where Trigg and his men were buried.

In 1782, the British staged an invasion of Kentucky with the help of their Native American allies, including Wyandots, Ottawas and Ojibwas.[40] When Trigg received word of their attack on Bryan Station, he was commanding the fort at Harrodsburg. He quickly assembled 135 local militiamen and met up with Colonel Daniel Boone and Major Levi Todd and more militia at Bryan Station.[41] When they approached the Blue Licks, a salt lick next to the Licking River, officers suspected a trap and convened a war council, but unruly troops lost patience and crossed the river.[41] The three leaders formed a column each, with Trigg commanding the right. When they met with the opposing force, Trigg's column was ambushed.[41] Trigg was killed and his men fell back after only five minutes of battle.[41] When troops returned to the scene of battle, Trigg's body was found quartered.[42]

Trigg was buried in a mass grave near the battle site, in what is now Nicholas County, Kentucky. Kentucky later named a county Trigg County to honor him. There is a historical marker in Cadiz, on the courthouse lawn, US 68. Historians Lewis and Richard Collins wrote of Trigg, "He was greatly beloved and very popular; and if he had lived, would have taken rank among the most distinguished men of his time."[43]

Notes

  1. Kegley, Early Adventurers, 1:171.
  2. Virkus, The Compendium of American Genealogy, 887.
  3. Virginia Independence Bicentennial Commission, Revolutionary Virginia: Road to Independence, 3:309.
  4. "Lincoln/Net at Northern Illinois University". Lincoln.lib.niu.edu. Retrieved 2009-08-06.
  5. 1 2 Kegley, Early Adventurers, 1:91.
  6. Summers, History of Southwest Virginia, 108–109; Kegley, Kegley's Virginia Frontier, 385, 401.
  7. Kegley, Frederick Bittle, Kegley's Virginia Frontier, 401–3.
  8. Kegley, Early Adventurers, 1:95.
  9. Kegley, Early Adventurers, 1:97.
  10. Cook, Fincastle and Kentucky Countys, Virginia, 131, 290, 293; Summers, History of Southwest Virginia, 130.
  11. Kegley, Early Adventurers, 1:369.
  12. Kegley, Early Adventurers, 1:161, 370.
  13. Virginia Independence Bicentennial Commission, Revolutionary Virginia: Road to Independence, 3:309; Leonard, The General Assembly of Virginia, 105.
  14. 1 2 Kegley, Early Adventurers, 1:103.
  15. Kegley, Early Adventurers, 1:107.
  16. Summers, History of Southwest Virginia, 253; Kegley, Early Adventurers, 1:107; Swem, A Register of the General Assembly of Virginia 1776–1918 and of the Constitutional Conventions, 439.
  17. Stephenson, Martha, "Why the Mother Town?", Kentucky State Historical Society 24 (1926), 273.
  18. Hammon and Taylor, Virginia's Western War, 1775–1786, 109.
  19. Hammon and Taylor, Virginia's Western War, 1775–1786, 117.
  20. Hoefling, 126.
  21. Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, 7:253; Kegley, Early Adventurers, 1:370.
  22. Cook, Fincastle and Kentucky Countys, Va, 19.
  23. Leonard, General Assembly of Virginia, 138.
  24. "Introduction to the Certificate book of the Virginia Land The Register of the Kentucky State Historical Society", 21 (1923), 5–6.
  25. Howard, Virginia Webb, Bryants Station Heroes and Heroines (1932), 31.
  26. Cook, Lincoln County, Kentucky Records, 8.
  27. Wilson, Samuel M., "The First Land Court of Kentucky 1779–1780", Address before the Kentucky State Bar Association at Covington, Kentucky, 6 July 1923 (Lexington, Ky: n.pub., 1923), 40.
  28. Virginia Independence Bicentennial Commission, Revolutionary Virginia: Road to Independence, 3:309; Leonard, General Assembly of Virginia, 110, 112, 114, 117.
  29. Summers, History of Southwest Virginia, 201–203; Kegley, Early Adventurers, 370.
  30. Kegley, Early Adventurers, 1:101.
  31. Summers, History of Southwest Virginia, 201–203.
  32. 1 2 Kegley, Early Adventurers, 370.
  33. Harwell, Richard, ed., The Committees of Safety of Westmoreland and Fincastle. Proceedings of the County Committees 1774–1776 (Richmond, VA:n.pub., 1956), 67.
  34. Virginia Independence Bicentennial Commission, Revolutionary Virginia: Road to Independence, 7:444–45.
  35. Virginia Independence Bicentennial Commission, Revolutionary Virginia: Road to Independence, 7:446.
  36. Summers, History of Southwest Virginia, 217.
  37. Johnson, William Preston and the Allegheny Patriots, 207–208.
  38. 1 2 3 Johnson, William Preston and the Allegheny Patriots, 208.
  39. Tillson, Gentry and Common Folk, 94.
  40. Ranck, Kentucky Locals: The Story of Bryan's Station, 26–28.
  41. 1 2 3 4 Talbert, Benjamin Logan: Kentucky Frontiersman, 156–159; Bakeless, Daniel Boone: Master of the Wilderness, 297–98.
  42. Calendar of Virginia State Papers, 281.
  43. Collins & Collins, History of Kentucky.

References

  • Bakeless, John (1989). Daniel Boone: Master of the Wilderness. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press. 
  • Cook, Michael L., C.G. and Cummings, Bettie A. Cook, C.G. (1987). Fincastle and Kentucky Countys, Virginia. Kentucky Records and History Volume 1. Evansville, Indiana: Cook Publications. 
  • Cook, Michael L. (1987). Lincoln County, Kentucky Records, Volume II. Evansville, Indiana: Cook Publications. 
  • Collins, Lewis; Richard H. Collins (1980). History of Kentucky. Southern Historical Press. 
  • Hammon, Neal O.; Richard Taylor (2002). Virginia's Western War, 1775–1786. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books. ISBN 9780811713894. 
  • Hoefling, Larry J. (2005). Chasing the Frontier: Scots-Irish in Early America. Lincoln, NE: iUniverse. ISBN 9780595359141. 
  • Johnson, Patricia Givens (1992) [1976]. William Preston and the Allegheny Patriots. Blacksburg, Virginia: Walpa Publishing. 
  • Kegley, Mary B., and Kegley, F.B. (1980). Early Adventurers on the Western Waters, Volume 1. Orange, Virginia: Green Publishers. 
  • Kegley, Frederick Bittle (1938). Kegley's Virginia Frontier. Roanoke, Virginia: The Southwest Virginia Historical Society. OCLC 52059859. 
  • Leonard, Cynthia Miller, comp. (1978). The General Assembly of Virginia, July 30, 1619–January 11, 1978. Richmond, Virginia: Virginia State Library. 
  • Ranck, George W. (1896). Kentucky Locals: The Story of Bryan's Station. Transylvania Printing. 
  • Summers, Lewis Preston (1971). History of Southwest Virginia 1746–1786, Washington County 1777–1870. Baltimore, Maryland: Regional Publishing Company.  (originally published 1903 OCLC 123915352)
  • Swem, Earl G. and Williams, John W. (1918). A Register of the General Assembly of Virginia 1776–1918 and of the Constitutional Conventions. Richmond, Virginia. 
  • Talbert, Charles Gano (1962). Benjamin Logan: Kentucky Frontiersman. University of Kentucky Press. 
  • Tillson, Albert H. (1991). Gentry and Common Folk: Political Culture on a Virginia Frontier 1740–1789. The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0-8131-1749-2. 
  • Virkus, Frederick Adams (1925–1942). The Compendium of American Genealogy, First Families of America, VII. Chicago, Illinois: A.N. Marquis. 

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