PUBLICATION 2-1966 GENERAL JOSEPH MARTIN
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A FORGOTTEN PIONEER 1740-1898 By Gordon Aronhime Joseph Martin is a fine example of the gifted pioneer leader of the Old Southwest in the Eighteenth century. He lived a life of folk-lore proportions, held many offices in several states, and died almost forgotten. This pioneer was the son of another Joseph Martin. Born in Bristol, England, Joseph Martin, Sr, was the second son and middle sibling of a wealthy merchant. Since, in those days, the younger son inherited the name only, Joseph was shipped as supercargo to America that he might provide for himself. He sailed on a ship called the Brice, a name he gave to his eldest son and which has remained in the family. (1) Joseph
Martin, Sr.,
remained in America. About 1729, he came to Albemarle Co., then
Goochland
Co., VA, where he met and married Susanna Childs, daughter of a
well-to-do
farmer. Hearing of this "degrading" act, his father in Bristol,
England,
disinherited his second son. Joseph, Sr., remained in Albemarle Co.,
VA,
dying there in 1760, leaving five sons and six daughters. General
Joseph
Martin was the third of these sons. (2) Colonel William Martin, son of
General Joseph, thus characterized the grandfather he never saw: "My
grandfather,
on his death in 1760,
General Joseph Martin was born in Albemarle Co., VA sometime in 1740. From childhood, he was wild, undisciplined, intellectually lazy, and shiftless. Unusually large, he treated school as a joke, often running away, sometimes combining with other reprobates to form a neighborhood menace. His father, unable to curb him, apprenticed him to a carpenter. That Joseph revolted against such a fate must not have much surprised his parents. He ran away and joined the army, the French and Indian War having just begun. William Martin's version was that his father and Thomas Sumter, later the famed Revolutionary General, ran off together to Fort Pitt. This does not seem correct, for Joseph Martin was paid for patrolling the frontiers in Augusta Co., VA, prior to October 2, 1775. (5) It is more likely that Martin joined Sumter, who was six years his senior, in 1756 for the trip to Fort Pitt. Again, on November 30, 1757, though then only seventeen, Martin was paid for frontier services in Augusta County as a sergeant. (6) An amusing
episode
arose on the return from the Fort Pitt tour of duty. Sumter and Martin
got separated on their return. When Joseph arrived at Staunton, he was
astonished to find his friend jailed for debt - astonished not at
Sumter's
being in debt or in jail, but at his being in jail for debt! Martin
asked,
and was granted, the boon of remaining in jail overnight with his
friend.
He had ten guineas and a tomahawk. The latter may have come from
anywhere,
but the former was probably
In 1762, Joseph Martin married Sarah Lucas, who according to her son William, was "a woman of the first order, but poor." (8) Faced now with not only realities, but responsibilities, Joseph Martin settled down to a livelihood that ill suited him - farming. An event occurred at this time which, at least in retrospect, is dramatic. Martin's English relatives, feeling remorse at the elder Joseph having been denied his patrimony because he had married in America, offered to share the estate, were a representative sent to England. Since Joseph, Sr. was dead, the family chose young Joseph to represent them. Passage was booked on a ship, but, as often happened in the eighteenth century, Joseph was delayed and the ship sailed without him. It was lost at sea with all aboard. Denied fortune this way, another avenue opened in the life of this remarkable man. The "Long Hunts" which began about this time were quite in the province of Joseph Martin. He made four of these annual, immensely profitable hunts, though these seem to have been in another area than the Southwest Virginia-East Tennessee locale in which he was so well known in later years. Martin had the qualities for this life. He was, as an expert gambler, willing to take bold risks; he was a hard drinker and a good fighter, yet quite-tempered; he was assuredly a fine woodsman and he was a veteran of three years of frontier militia fighting. All these qualities combined to make his hunts successful enough to start him on the road to comparative riches. The last of Martin's annual "Long Hunts" ended in 1768. (9) He then
became overseer
for a wealthy relative whose name is given simply as Minor in existing
records. Mr. Minor was also closely connected by both blood and
business
with Dr. Thomas Walker. Perhaps Minor suggested that Walker secure
Martin's
services for a proposed trip of separation and settlement in Southwest
Virginia; perhaps Walker had known this wild, unruly, but able, natural
leader of men for many years since both were from Albemarle Co. At any
rate, his selection of Martin to head the expedition to Powell's Valley
furnished the first of two
Western
exploration
and settlement was quite chaotic at the opening of the year 1769. The
Royal
Proclamation of 1763 had closed the area on tributaries of the
Mississippi
to all settlement, although traders to the Cherokee nation went back
and
forth freely. Some loopholes in the closed frontier were nowbeginning
to
appear. Dr. Walker was in the inner circle of Virginia government. With
Colonel (later General) Andrew Lewis, Walker had been a representative
for the Virginia
Twenty
years earlier,
a group of Virginians, including Dr. Walker, had formed the great Ohio
Company which was given a grant of 800,000 acres of land. The terms of
this grant did not limit the company to any one area within the domain
of the Colony of Virginia for location of this land, and it did not
require
that tracts of land so located by of any specified size - merely that
the
total acreage taken up by the company could not exceed 800,000 acres,
and
that there be no prior valid
Dr. Walker had made a trip of exploration in 1770 which had led to his discovery of what is now the State of Kentucky, and his path then led through Powell's Valley, which had been named for one of his party. It was to
solidify
his claim to the fertile reaches of Powell's Valley, adjacent to
strategic
Cumberland Gap, that Walker organized his expedition and promised
Martin
21,000 acres of land plus pay for services. The only condition was that
the Martin expedition must be the first to settle on the land. If this
condition were not fulfilled other comers would get a thousand acres
each
and Martin's group nothing; if the condition were successfully met by
Martin's
forces, they were to
The leaders
of this
expedition, in addition to Joseph Martin, were his brother Brice and
friend
William Hord. The party set out from Albemarle and spent four days in
reaching
Staunton, where they spent several days "competing business," which
seems
to have meant gathering supplies at this frontier town. The little
expedition
arrived at Ingles Ferry on March 14, 1769. This crossing of the New
River,
in use till relatively recent times, was located a few miles upstream
from
the
They heard disturbing news upon their arrival at the Holston river. A group headed by a man named Kirtley, and including Captain Rucker and others, had already left for the valley, having paid a guide five pounds to pilot them. This guide was reputed to have known a way six days closer than the Martin route. Like all professional gamblers, Martin did not panic under stress. He ordered flour reduced to one quart per person. All other rations were to be sold, and the party to rely on the bounty of nature and the marksmanship of the men. Hiring a guide, they pushed off into the wilderness on the 18th. Two days later, they realized they were lost. (12) This type of emergency often proves the making of men of real ability and Joseph Martin rose to this minor occasion. It was agreed that a rendezvous would be maintained at the present camp and each man would range out seeking the trail. On the third day, the agreed-upon triple blast of the hunting horn signaled that the Hunter's Trace had been found. This welcome signal came from the hunting horn of Joseph Martin. When the weary, but elated, men reassembled, it was only with difficulty that Martin restrained his men from committing mayhem upon the hapless "Guide." Exhausted by anxiety, the men felt a rest of two days was needed before they pushed on once more. On March 26, 1769, they found Powell's Valley. (13) Exactly a week later, the baggage detail under Brother Brice Martin came into camp. It was still another two weeks later before the Kirbley-Rucker faction arrived in the Valley. Martin's party staked off a 21,000 acre tract near the present village of Rose Hill, VA. Here, they built a large stockaded fort. It proved useless. The Indians ran Martin's men off before the corn ripened. They went wearily back to Albemarle County, but retained title to their land. (13) Little is known about Martin's activities between the summer of 1769 and that of 1774. In a letter to him dated September 23, 1771, Dr. Walker writes Martin that his land was been "saved by the honesty of the Cherokees." This appears to mean that the Cherokees who accompanied Colonel John Donelson, then running the so-called Indian line, insisted on Martin's land being included in the settler's side of the land by virtue of an offset. (14) Martin was commissioned a captain of Pittsylvania County militia by Lord Dunmore, Virginia's last colonial governor, on August 25, 1774. (15) With the outbreak of Dunmore's War, though a Captain, martin was sent to serve as a lieutenant under Abraham Penn on New River. Since Penn was old and relatively infirm, Martin commanded the company, even receiving from Colonel William Preston, on November 4, 1774, the letter ordering disbandment of the company. (16) Martin returned to his farm to give commands to plow horses, not men. His commission as captain was routinely renewed when Dunmore's rule was superseded by theCommittee of Public Safety when Virginia became a Commonwealth. (17) A few
months prior
to the renewal of Martin's commission by the Public Safety committee,
an
event took place on the banks of Watauga river which influenced
Martin's
life. This was the largest American real estate transaction, the "sale"
of thirty-two million acres of land for fifty thousand dollars in
merchandise
- the noted Transylvania purchase. Judge Richard Henderson made this
transaction
at the site of Elizabethton, TN on March 17, 1775. Although Martin was
not present at the sale, he was appointed agent and entry take for
Powell's
Valley by Henderson.
In midsummer, 1776, he received a letter from Colonel John Donelson, Andrew Jackson's future father-in-law, ordering him to assemble his militia company and march immediately to the Long Island of the Holston. (19) Joseph Martin was now thirty-six. Had he died at this point, there would be no need for surprise and regret that he has been bypassed by history. The events of the next fourteen years on the frontier were to change this. One of
Martin's soldiers
in his Pittsylvania company, William Alexander, had this to say in his
pension declaration: "In the month of June, 1776, he entered the
service
of the United States in the county of Pittsylvania, VA, as a volunteer
for six months in a company commanded by Capt. Joseph Martin. He was
marched
from thence direct to the Long Island of the Holston where they joined
the troops under the command of Col. Christie, or Christian. After
being
stationed at the Long Island of Holston for about six weeks during
which
time other troops were collecting and
On the
return of
the troops, Martin and his company, which had his two brothers, Brice
and
John, as lieutenant and ensign, were stationed at the newly-built fort
Patrick Henry, located at the upper end of the Long Island and on the
north
bank of Holston river. Since it was customary to man local forces with
local troops, it is strange that Martin's company was chosen to garrison
Although
the opening
months of 1777 were no busier than any other in martin's crowded life,
it might be well to consider them in detail rather than in board
outline
as heretofore. He was engaged in a number of overlapping and relatively
important activities. Stationed as he was on the very brink of the
Cherokee
territory, he was subjected to constant skirmishes and parleys with the
While at
Fort Lee,
he had a dangerous skirmish with the Indians in adjacent Powell's
Valley
in which two of his best spies, the brothers Bunch, were seriously
wounded.
(26) Meanwhile, the Washington County court had appointed him to take
the
tithables of the county in the section north of the river Clinch, a
difficult,
tedious, and dangerous task that involved long, lonely rides over
roughest
terrain to secure the names of the scattered settlers. He was also
commissioned
a
The most
climactic
event in Martin's life occurred on November 3, 1777 when Governor
Patrick
Henry appointed him superintendent of Indian Affairs for the
Commonwealth
of Virginia. (30) The appointment specified that martin was to take up
his residence in the Indian nation, yet he preferred to remain close to
his holdings in Powell's Valley. He used an ingenious method to solve
his
dilemma, establishing residence on the Long Island of Holston,
presumably
on the lower,
Always
quick to realize
the potential value of property, Martin took up a large tract of land
on
the site of the present city of Kingsport, TN. (32) Meanwhile, he led a
rather uneventful life in the uneasy quiet of the year 1778 on the
Holston.
Early in 1779, he was offered a major's command in the nautical
expedition
of Colonel Evan Shelby to Chickamauga, but refused it. (33) Without
relinquishing
his membership in the Washington Co., VA Court, Martin took the oath of
office as
The
succeeding years
were full of overlapping posts, honors, and duties, all of which Martin
seems to have successfully discharged without consideration of his own
comfort or personal feelings. Because these are so numerous and
overlapping,
they are only summarized here. In 1783, he was a commissioner with
Isaac
Shelby and Colonel John Donelson, the latter now a resident of middle
Tennessee
and the former of Kentucky, to treat with the Chickasaws at French
A change in his fortunes, though not in his fortune, came in 1789, as the Indian affairs now became a federal matter and his long tenure as agent ended. He sold his huge holdings in Powell's Valley and his land near Long Island and returned to Henry County to live. (38) His Indian "wife" went to South Carolina to live with her aging mother, Nancy Ward. It is interesting that Betsy Ward came once to Henry County to visit the family and was graciously received by the second Mrs. Joseph Martin. In 1790, Martha was prominently mentioned for and many expected that he would become governor South of the River Ohio, but he was passed over in favor of the candidate of the North Carolina faction, William Blount. (37) Martin, on his return to Southside Virginia, began a long membership in the Virginia House of Delegates. In 1793, he was appointed Brigadier General for his militia district by the governor of Virginia. Several years later, he was on the commission to settle the line between Virginia and Kentucky. Ten years later, in 1803, he served on the commission that finally solved the Virginia-Tennessee boundary which with its double lines of Walker and Henderson had harassed the border inhabitants since 1779. In the summer of 1808, he made a long journey at the request of the government through the Indian territories, armed with a safe-conduct signed by the Secretary of War. He returned in the autumn of 1808 feeble and worn-out. Soon after Thanksgiving, he suffered a stroke. He died quietly on December 18, 1808, at the age of 68, after a life which, remarkable as it is in rich detail, is not half so astounding as the fact that it has been completely ignored by historians. (37) FOOTNOTES:
(1) Colonel
William Martin to Lyman C. Draper, Dixon Springs, TN, June 1, 1842
(Draper
MSS 8ZZ2, 15 pages) This is
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