BIG BILL HARDIN AND THE FORT
William Hardin was a real pioneer, known as
"Big Bill". He was of large physique,
and a capable leader. He
was not only a great warrior, fighting back the
Indians,
Indians, but was also a man engaged in the
business and political life of the community.
There were three brothers, French Huguenots, who,
in order to escape religious persecution in
France fled to Canada. The extreme cold of the
Canadian climate
caused them to emigrate to Virginia. Two of the
brothers settled there permanently, the other
emigrated to South Carolina. From the brothers
who settled
in Virginia, descended the
Kentucky Hardins, John, Martin, and William came
to Kentucky and William was the pioneer of
Breckinridge County.
John Hardin, for whom Hardin County was named,
was murdered by the Indians in 1792, while on an
embassy to their county. Lydia Hardin, a sister,
married
Charles Wickliff, and was the mother of
distinguished men and eminent statesmen. Sarah,
another sister, married her cousin, Ben Hardin,
and was the mother
of the great criminal lawyer, Ben Hardin.
William Hardin (Big Bill) was born in 1747. He
married Winifred Holtsclaw and they had eight
children. His wife having died, he was married a
second time to
Susannah McGee, July 9, 1808. The children of the
first marriage were: Winnie Ann, who married
William Comstock. This lady grew, picked, carded,
spun,
and wove the cotton into cloth from which she
made her wedding gown. Henry Hardin, lived and
died on a farm in Sugar Tree Run in Breckinridge
County.
Malinda married William Crawford, died and was
buried in the Fort. William was postmaster in
Frankfort for many years. Elijah was killed at
Hustons Springs in
Hardinsburg in 1815. The other children were
Amelia, John, and Jehu. Colonel
Hardin also reared a niece and nephew. Daniel
Hardin and Polly, his sister who
later married Ben Huff, the first sheriff of
Grayson County. John Hardin, William's uncle,
also made his home with this daring nephew, and
was murdered by
Indians, it was generally supposed a short
distance from the Fort on what is now the Old
Brandenburg Road.
Colonel William Hardin and his party had floated
down the Ohio River as far as the Falls at
Louisville. Here they remained for a short time
but not liking the lay
of the land he and a party of five men floated on
down the river looking for a place to make a
colony as he called it. Upon reaching the point
where
Stephensport now stands, he liked the looks of
the country, and sailed from the Ohio River up
Sinking Creek to the Falls near where Sample is.
It so happened that there was a party of Indians
at the falls where they landed. They left their
boat and went overland, followed by the Indians,
to the present
sight of Hardinsburg where Big Bill declared the
place for his colony.
By the time they reached the spot which they
would choose for their colony they realized they
were being followed by Indians in superior
numbers. They
decided to avoid a fight by traveling over land
to Hines Fort, now Elizabethtown, which was
established the year before, 1779. By traveling
all night they
reached a large spring near Rough Creek, where
they stopped to slake their thirst and rest for a
few minutes. "It is probable that this is
where Big Springs
is now". It was at this point that the
Indians caught up with Hardin's party, and a
fight followed. One of the group Mr. St. Clair
was killed but Big Bill and
the rest escaped to Hines Fort.
Determined to establish his colony he returned
the following spring with twelve families and
built a typical frontier fort of stockade walls
and watch towers
at the corners, and several cabins near the fort.
This was the last pioneer fort built on the
frontier, and the fartherest west of any frontier
fort in America. When
his settlement was completed, news came of an
Indian Village being built on the Saline Creek in
Illinois. Hardin was not well pleased that the
Indians should
be in such a close vicinity to his little
settlement so he secured a group of eighty men
and went into Illinois to dislodge them. When
they arrived there were
but three warriors guarding the village. They
were shot. Hardin,
then deployed his men to a small forest
surrounded by open land and on all sides to await
the
return of the Indian party. When they returned
the battle was furious, often hand-to-hand
combat. Many of the whites were killed. At the
outbreak of
the battle, Big Bill was shot through the leg.
Sensing the moral support his men needed, he
climbed upon a huge fallen chestnut log and
continued to direct
the battle. The Indians were all
killed or put to flight. This battle was never
reported to the government and so has more often
than not
been passed over
by historians, but it was reputed to have been
one of the bloodiest battles in the winning of
Kentucky. Among the number of the eighty men who
went with
Colonel Hardin to dislodge the Indians in
Illinois, were:
Christopher
Bush, Samuel Spencer, William McDaniels, William
Luce, John Jolly, William Weatherholt,
Charles Hamilton, John Bruner,
____ Brearshera, James Jennings, William Kelso,
Henry Dean, ___ Barger,
___ Carlyle, ___ Shiveley,
Mordicia Lincoln, John Faith, ___ Miller, Samuel
Crawford, Edgar Pate, Adam Barr,
Ben Huff, Ben Connstock, Horace
Marry, Archibal Lockard, Daniel Meredith, ___
Haynes, ___ Hardiway,
___ Claycomb, ___ Payne, William
Perrin, ___ Rice, Joseph Toby, ___ Taul, George
Robards, Richard Stevens,
and ___ Lampton.
The descendants of many of the above families
have remained in Breckinridge County, the place
of their birth, and are prominently connected
with the business,
social, and religious life of the county.
Colonel William Hardin wore a coveted trophy
under his coonskin cap, and many a young Indian
brave paid the supreme price for trying to collect it.
Among
the Indians, he was reported to have been killed
more than once and as a result he was feared by
many as a ghost and has dispersed large groups of
them
by just being seen. The year after the fort was
built, several acres of ground had been cleared
and the settlers were planting corn. Miss Sarah
McDonald,
a young girl, was dropping corn
for Colonel Hardin when they were attacked by the
Indians. Colonel Hardin was shot through the
lungs, a lesser physique
could not have survived. One Indian warrior,
realizing he was shot, came forward with his
knife to take Big Bill's scalp. Sarah handed
Colonel Hardin his
rifle which he pointed at the Indian causing him
to run back. Sarah finally succeeded in getting
Colonel Hardin his gun and said, "Point it
at him, Mr. Bill or
he'll kill us both." With great effort Big
Bill pointed his gun at the Indian who retreated
until Sarah, too, could get on the horse and they
reached the safety
of the stockade.
Colonel Hardin did not shirk his political
responsibilities. From 1810-1813, he was a
member of the legislature of Kentucky.
All residents
of Breckinridge County are recipients of Colonel
Hardin's charity and foresight. Whether we sit on
the courthouse rail and whittle, or once a
year visit the sheriff's office to pay taxes;
whether we hold political office in the
courthouse or pay for our misbehavior in jail, we are
on ground donated to Breckinridge County as a
public property by this great man. This
magnificent man died in Breckinridge County, and
lies today in an unmarked grave near
U. S. 60 Highway and Hardin's Creek. No one
knows his exact burial place to any closer
tolerance than one acre. What an end to our
county's greatest pioneer!
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