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'''Pluggy''' ([[Mohawk language|Mohawk]]: '''Tecanyaterighto''') (d. [[December 29]], [[1776]]) was an 18th century [[Mingo]] chieftain and ally of [[Logan]] during [[Lord Dunmore's War]] and, during the [[American Revolution]], he allied with the British and commanded a series of raids against American settlements throughout [[Ohio]] and [[Kentucky]] before his death against [[McClelland's Station]] in 1776.
'''Pluggy''' ([[Mohawk language|Mohawk]]: '''Tecanyaterighto''') (d. [[December 29]], [[1776]]) was an 18th century [[Mingo]] chieftain and ally of [[Logan]] during [[Lord Dunmore's War]] and, during the [[American Revolution]], he allied with the British and commanded a series of raids against American settlements throughout [[Ohio]] and [[Kentucky]] before his death against [[McClelland's Station]] in 1776.


===Biography===
==Biography==
Originally from a [[Mohawk]] band, Pluggy gathered a number of [[Mingo]] and [[Iroquois]] followers and moved westward eventually setting on the site of [[Delaware, Ohio]] in 1772. <ref> Smyth, Samuel Gordon. ''A Genealogy of the Duke-Shepherd-Van Metre Family: From Civil, Military, Church and Family Records and Documents''. Lancaster: New Era Printing Company, 1909. (pg. 181)</ref> During [[Lord Dunmore's War]], he was one of the most active chieftains allied to the [[Shawnee]] conducting extensive raids against settlements as far as [[western Pennsylvania]] and [[Virginia]] from his base at [[Pluggy's Town]], <ref>Hinderaker, Eric. ''Elusive Empires: Constructing Colonialism in the Ohio Valley, 1673-1800''. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1997. (pg. 209) ISBN 0-521-66345-8</ref> 18 miles north of present-day [[Columbus, Ohio]]. Despite the peace following the Treaty of , Pluggy remained a fierce and particularly hostile enemy after finding ''"his blood relations lieing dead"'' by Virginian colonists and, throughout the late-1770s, Pluggy's Town was used by Pluggy and other renegade [[Chippewas]], [[Wyandots]] and [[Ottawas]] to stage raids against American settlements. <ref>Calloway, Colin G. ''The American Revolution in Indian Country: Crisis and Diversity in Indian Country''. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 1995. (pg. 31-32) ISBN 0-521-47569-4</ref> In late-1775, he joined the British at the start of the American Revolution. <ref>Zeisberger, David; Hermann Wellenreuther and Carola Wessel, ed. ''The Moravian Mission Diaries of David Zeisberger''. University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2005. (pg. 610) ISBN 0-271-02522-0</ref>
Originally from a [[Mohawk]] band, Pluggy gathered a number of [[Mingo]] and [[Iroquois]] followers and moved westward eventually setting on the site of [[Delaware, Ohio]] in 1772. <ref> Smyth, Samuel Gordon. ''A Genealogy of the Duke-Shepherd-Van Metre Family: From Civil, Military, Church and Family Records and Documents''. Lancaster: New Era Printing Company, 1909. (pg. 181)</ref> During [[Lord Dunmore's War]], he was one of the most active chieftains allied to the [[Shawnee]] conducting extensive raids against settlements as far as [[western Pennsylvania]] and [[Virginia]] from his base at [[Pluggy's Town]], <ref>Hinderaker, Eric. ''Elusive Empires: Constructing Colonialism in the Ohio Valley, 1673-1800''. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1997. (pg. 209) ISBN 0-521-66345-8</ref> 18 miles north of present-day [[Columbus, Ohio]]. Despite the peace following the Treaty of , Pluggy remained a fierce and particularly hostile enemy after finding ''"his blood relations lieing dead"'' by Virginian colonists and, throughout the late-1770s, Pluggy's Town was used by Pluggy and other renegade [[Chippewas]], [[Wyandots]] and [[Ottawas]] to stage raids against American settlements. <ref>Calloway, Colin G. ''The American Revolution in Indian Country: Crisis and Diversity in Indian Country''. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 1995. (pg. 31-32) ISBN 0-521-47569-4</ref> In late-1775, he joined the British at the start of the American Revolution. <ref>Zeisberger, David; Hermann Wellenreuther and Carola Wessel, ed. ''The Moravian Mission Diaries of David Zeisberger''. University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2005. (pg. 610) ISBN 0-271-02522-0</ref>


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He was later buried by members of his tribe on a bluff overhanging the nearby spring. For a number of years afterwards, a popular legend claimed that the echo heard in the spring was the death cry of Pluggy. <ref>Federal Writers' Project. ''Kentucky: A Guide to the Bluegrass State''. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1939. (pg. 264)</ref>
He was later buried by members of his tribe on a bluff overhanging the nearby spring. For a number of years afterwards, a popular legend claimed that the echo heard in the spring was the death cry of Pluggy. <ref>Federal Writers' Project. ''Kentucky: A Guide to the Bluegrass State''. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1939. (pg. 264)</ref>


===Further reading===
==Further reading==
*Taylor, James W. ''History of the State of Ohio''. Cincinatti: H.W. Derby & Co. Publishers, 1854.
*Taylor, James W. ''History of the State of Ohio''. Cincinatti: H.W. Derby & Co. Publishers, 1854.


===References===
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}

[[Category:Year of birth missing]]
[[Category:1776 deaths]]
[[Category:Native American leaders]]
[[Category:Iroquois people]]
[[Category:People from Ohio]]

Revision as of 00:08, 2 April 2008

Pluggy (Mohawk: Tecanyaterighto) (d. December 29, 1776) was an 18th century Mingo chieftain and ally of Logan during Lord Dunmore's War and, during the American Revolution, he allied with the British and commanded a series of raids against American settlements throughout Ohio and Kentucky before his death against McClelland's Station in 1776.

Biography

Originally from a Mohawk band, Pluggy gathered a number of Mingo and Iroquois followers and moved westward eventually setting on the site of Delaware, Ohio in 1772. [1] During Lord Dunmore's War, he was one of the most active chieftains allied to the Shawnee conducting extensive raids against settlements as far as western Pennsylvania and Virginia from his base at Pluggy's Town, [2] 18 miles north of present-day Columbus, Ohio. Despite the peace following the Treaty of , Pluggy remained a fierce and particularly hostile enemy after finding "his blood relations lieing dead" by Virginian colonists and, throughout the late-1770s, Pluggy's Town was used by Pluggy and other renegade Chippewas, Wyandots and Ottawas to stage raids against American settlements. [3] In late-1775, he joined the British at the start of the American Revolution. [4]

In December 1776, Pluggy led a band of thirty warriors up the Ohio and Licking Rivers attacking Harrod's Town [5] and, later that day, ambushed a 10-man party under John Todd and John Gabriel Jones on December 25. The men had been marching down the valley towards the Ohio River, where Jones and George Rogers Clark had stored 500 pounds of gunpowder, when they were attacked killing Jones and another man in the fusillade and capturing another four men in the final charge. [6] The remaining four were able to escape, the story later being told by one of the survivors, pioneer and hunter David Cooper, in the 1987 book The Kentuckians by Janice Holt Giles. [7]

Several days later, he arrived at McClelland's Station, a settlement of thirty families located in present-day downtown Georgetown [8] and defended by twenty settlers including frontiersman Robert Todd, Robert Ford, Robert Patterson, Edward Worthington, Charles White and founder John McClelland. On December 29, Pluggy led between forty of fifty warriors against the fort and retreated after several hours of fighting leaving a number of men dead including Charles White and John McClelland. During the retreat, Pluggy himself was shot and killed by four of the fort's defenders in retribution for the death of McClelland. [9] [10]

He was later buried by members of his tribe on a bluff overhanging the nearby spring. For a number of years afterwards, a popular legend claimed that the echo heard in the spring was the death cry of Pluggy. [11]

Further reading

  • Taylor, James W. History of the State of Ohio. Cincinatti: H.W. Derby & Co. Publishers, 1854.

References

  1. ^ Smyth, Samuel Gordon. A Genealogy of the Duke-Shepherd-Van Metre Family: From Civil, Military, Church and Family Records and Documents. Lancaster: New Era Printing Company, 1909. (pg. 181)
  2. ^ Hinderaker, Eric. Elusive Empires: Constructing Colonialism in the Ohio Valley, 1673-1800. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1997. (pg. 209) ISBN 0-521-66345-8
  3. ^ Calloway, Colin G. The American Revolution in Indian Country: Crisis and Diversity in Indian Country. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 1995. (pg. 31-32) ISBN 0-521-47569-4
  4. ^ Zeisberger, David; Hermann Wellenreuther and Carola Wessel, ed. The Moravian Mission Diaries of David Zeisberger. University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2005. (pg. 610) ISBN 0-271-02522-0
  5. ^ Belue, Ted Franklin. The Long Hunt: Death of the Buffalo East of the Mississippi. Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania: Stackpole Books, 1996. (pg. 118) ISBN 0-8117-0968-X
  6. ^ Nester, William R. The Frontier War for American Independence. Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania: Stackpole Books, 2004. ISBN 0-8117-0077-1
  7. ^ Giles, Janice Holt. The Kentuckians. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1987. (pg. 165-167) ISBN 0-8131-0177-8
  8. ^ Draper, Lyman C. The Life of Daniel Boone. Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania: Stackpole Books, 1998. (pg. 433) ISBN 0-8117-0979-5
  9. ^ Bradford, John. The Voice of the Frontier: John Bradford's Notes on Kentucky. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1993. (pg. 14) ISBN 0-8131-1801-8
  10. ^ Conover, Charolette Reeve. Concerning the Forefathers: Being a Memoir, with Personal Narrative and Letters of Two Pioneers, Col. Robert Patterson and Col. John Johnston. New York: Winthrop Press, 1902. (pg. 146)
  11. ^ Federal Writers' Project. Kentucky: A Guide to the Bluegrass State. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1939. (pg. 264)