PUBLICATION 2-1966 ST. MARIE ON THE
CLINCH |
By Emory L. Hamilton On December 1, 1951, in company with the late James Taylor Adams, I visited "Sugar Hill" overlooking the town of St. Paul, VA, to what is unquestionably the oldest house in Wise County, and probably the only one to have ever been occupied by European Royalty - the home of Baron Francois Pierre De Tuboeuf. The place was reached by a two mile section of poorly kept and seldom traveled secondary road, and a mile of red clay. I would not risk the car all the way, but parked it on the roadside and we sloshed the rest of the way through red clay mud, sometimes leaving the road altogether and picking our way through thickets of undergrowth strange to other sections of Wise County, such as Osage Orange, Honey Locust and Box Elder. The house located at the extreme of a high finger of land jutting out from Sandy Ridge, is set atop a bluff overlooking Clinch River, and is not perhaps greatly changed since the days of the Baron's occupancy, still retaining port-holes on the second floor as a defense against marauding Indians.
The
topography o
the country is such that viewed from St. Paul the
house appears on the
south of Clinch River and in Russell Co. The river,
however, makes a
sudden
bend between the hills and so close the land
hugged walls that
one
loses sight of the twisting course of the waters when
viewed from the
escarpment
above. Actually the house is on the northwest side of
the river
In the year 1772, (1) John English established settlement on this spot, built a house there and recorded his deed to 199 acres on June 26, 1786, in Russell Co., VA. (2)
On
Christmas day
1782 the Indians attacked the home of John English,
but the family
apparently
suffered no harm during this foray. On January 29,
1783, Col. Arthur
Campbell,
writing to the Governor of Virginia makes this
statement:
English
apparently
lived in peace for a few years after this for there is
no account that
the Indians bothered him in the interim for 1782 until
1787, which is
remarkable
in that he was the only inhabitant living in the
bounds of present Wise
County across from Castlewood on a lonely mountain top
and distant some
three or four miles from the forts on the south side
of Clinch. Fifteen
years after he had settled on his claim all the horror
and tragedy of a
savage race was brought home to the man who had dared
the wilderness to
carve out his home and his destiny. On March 8, 1787,
the red denizens
of the forest struck in all their barbarity, killing
Molly the wife of
John English, and his two little sons. Alexander
Barnett, County
Lieutenant
of Russell County, wrote to the Governor of Virginia,
on March 26,
1787,
saying:
Again on
May 19,
1787, Alexander Barnette again writing to the
Governor, says: Whether John English lived on at his old home after his family was destroyed is not known. In 1791 he sold the place to the French Baron who moved on the hill in that same year. Mary English, daughter of John, and whether she was the only surviving child is not known, but no other children qualified as heir to his estate.
Some have
written
that Baron De Tubouef having cast his lot with a
losing political party
was forced to flee his native land to London, England.
While residing
in
London he supposedly invested in town property which
he traded to one
Richard
Smith for 55,000 acres of land in the western
wilderness of Virginia.
He
did, according to record, purchase his land from
Smith, but of his
residence
in London I question on this recorded fact: De Tubouef sailed on the Nee La Petite Nannette, which from the name, was unquestionably a French ship, and was under the command of Captain Pitahugo. With him was his son (Alexander) his niece (Louise Duchesne), and five servants. Their destination was Richmond, VA. Russell Co., VA, Deed Book 4, page 48, dated September 30, 1798, refers to Richard Smith, thusly: "Formerly of the City and County of New London, in the state of Connecticut, and late of the City, County and State of New York, and resident at Waddon, in the county of Surry and the Kingdom of England, but now resident in the said New York." Richard Smith was one of the early land speculators and owned vast acreages in the western wilderness of Virginia, selling only a portion of his large speculations to the Baron. Baron De Tubouef is said to have lived at Dickensonville a short time after his arrival in 1791. Possibly, while living here, he negotiated for the tract of 119 acres from John English, which tract was in the bounds of the French lands, but title being older than that belonging to the Frenchman. In a lawsuit instituted in Russell Co., VA, in 1859, by Dale Carter against James Campbell, et als. Jonathan Osborne testified that he worked for the French Baron De Tuboeuf at the time he was 21 years of age, and that De Tubeuf bought the property from John English because of an improvement thereon, and lived on the said property. De Tubouef was residing upon the land purchased from John English in January, 1792, as evidenced by a letter to the governor, wherein he states that he had made settlement thereon in that month, and that one of his friends was departing that moment to receive the six hundred pounds sterling being loaned him by the state for the purpose of bringing French immigrants to his settlement upon the Clinch. Here the state set a precedent probably unknown before or since, in lending money to an individual for property improvement. Soon, however, the Baron had his six hundred pounds sterling to further his settlement, but which in the end was to cost him his life. During 1792 a number of improvements had been made, including a wagon road from the Russell Courthouse (then at Dickensonville), to the plantation. Also a body of soldiers had been stationed two miles away, which according to the Baron's letters had saved them from the Indian incursions, since being on the right side of the river Clinch they were more open to attack than those on the opposite side in proximity to Moore's and Russell's forts. Despite these cheering aspects all was not sunshine at St. Marie on the Clinch, for by October of 1792, some of the immigrants had deserted and in the words of the Baron to the Governor: "I have received the six hundred pounds you granted me and nothing will be wanting to be prosperity of my settlement if the greater part of my companions, too easily dismayed, yielding to a false terror, and tired at the difficulties met at the beginning had not abandoned me." In this letter he asks the Governor and the Legislature for a Certificate ascertaining the true state of the country, the fertility of the soil, the legitimately of his ownership, the facility of keeping ones self from the Indians as evidenced by his residence there for the past year, in order to encourage more immigrants to his settlement. Reading between the lines in the full context of this letter found in the State Papers one senses a deep faith and appreciation in his adopted land by this energetic Frenchman. Despite the adversities he complains of, Baron De Tubouef, had been cheered by the fact that his youngest son, Francois De Tubouef and two French families had joined him in April, 1793.
Apparently
life at
St. Marie moved along at a normal pace until April,
1795, the day an
election
was held in Russell County to elect Representatives.
The story of that
day is best told by Alexander De Tubouef, oldest son
of the Baron in a
deposition taken by John Tate, a Justice of the Peace
for Russell Co.,
VA, on the 3rd day of May, 1796, wherein he states: The younger son, Francois, might have been serving in the Continental Army at this time. A letter sent from the Baron to the Governor, by his son, Francois, dated August 16, 1793, informs the Governor that his son desires to continue the military service started in France for his new country, and the he will go down to General Washington to solicit "employ" in the troops, and asks for the Governor's recommendation. The murderers of Baron De Tuboef made their escape into the Illinois territory. A reward of $500 was posted for their apprehension, which reward notice gives a detailed description of each, and lists their names as John Brown, alias Bond, and Richard Barrow. The governor commissioned James McFarland and Lieutenant David ward to go to the Illinois country to seek their apprehension. This, they apparently succeeded in doing, but they broke custody in the Illinois Territory at a place called new Design in May, 1796, and were never seemingly recaptured. Three men by the name of Payne, Roberts, and Best were lodged in jail in Washington County as accessory to the murder and robbery of Baron De Tubouef and brought to trial in that county. What happened to the French immigrants, the sons of Baron De Tubouef and St. Marie on the Clinch? The French land was sold by the Commonwealth of Virginia, in 1854 to satisfy the mortgage at a public auction held at the home of Hiram H. Kilgore, opposite the present Clinch Valley College.
The "safe
passage"
granted to Baron De Tubouef by the King of France, was
for himself, his
son Alexander, his niece Louise Duchesne, and five
servants. The
younger
son, Francois Pierre with two French families joined
the settlement in
April, 1793. So far, I have nowhere found the names of
the five
servants.
Besides the niece, Louise Duchesne, five other people
were on security
for the six hundred pounds sterling, and it must be
assumed these came
with the Baron from France and may or may not have
been the five
servants
referred to. They were: Louise LeChartier, Charles De
Spada, Euseba De
La Planche, Caesar Le Febore, and Simon Perchet. Of
these five I have
been
able to account for four:
The story
of "Sugar
Hill" picks up where St. Marie ends, and it, too, is a
romantic
interlude
of history. While John English had sold his land to
Baron De Tubouef,
it
seems he had not yet made a deed at the time of De
Tubouef's untimely
death.
After the death of the Baron it appears that Louise
Duchesne had, in
some
way, held the land in possession. In a clemency suit
instituted in From this point on "Old Hattler Bickley" as Sebastian was locally known, proceeded to enlarge the farm by buying additional adjoining land, and eventually with the help of slave labor, developed a very fine cattle and grain farm.
Leading off
from
the southern slope of the hill below the house was a
large grove of
sugar
maples which he developed into a thriving sugar
industry, the first,
and
perhaps the only maple sugar industry in Wise
County. On the
southern
slope also was located the sugar camp, where the sap
was collected and
boiled down in vats much like the molasses pan until
it crystallized
into After the death of Hattler Bickley the place passed to his son, Charles, who lived out his life there, and with his wife, lies buried just west of the old house.
The
question now,
who really did build this old home? There is a
tradition that the
original
house burned, and that Hattler Bickley built the
present house. I
question
this story for three reasons: First, the details of
its burning being
rather
fantastic in that fire broke out across the river and
that sparks blown
across by the wind fired a haystack and the
conflagration eventually
spread
to the house. Secondly, there are port holes in the
house under the
upstairs
windows (although
The house
measures
roughly 24 x 32 feet. The main part is a two story
with a large
kitchen-dining
section of one story running off from the south end.
The fireplaces are
four downstairs and two up. Three of the downstairs
fireplaces are in
the
same chimney, built cornerwise, or triangular. The
ones on the ground
floor
being six feet wide and those on the second floor four
feet wide. The
chimneys
are built of hand burned brick and are huge in size.
The (1) Washington
Co., VA, Land Entry
Book 1;
(2) Russell Co. Land Entry Book 1; (3) |
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