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III
A RUIN BESIDE LAKE CHAMPLAIN “WHAT river is that?” asked the man occupying the seat in front of me as our train
began to skirt the shores of a body of water about seventy-five miles north of
Albany. He put the
question to the conductor who responded, “That’s Lake Champlain.” “You don’t
say so! Why, I could throw across it! l had no idea it was so narrow,” and the
man seemed disappointed as well as surprised. Considering his Neighbor’s Fields He would
have found a good deal of difficulty in throwing
across, yet the lake really is extremely attenuated at the south end, and
slenderness is a characteristic even to its outlet. On a clear day, especially,
the opposite shore is so distinct and apparently near that it requires an
effort to remember you are looking on a lake and not the broad channel of a
stream. When the distance is veiled in summer haze or with falling rain this
effect is less marked, the other shore seems farther removed, and the charm of
the lake is greatly enhanced. The aspect
of the surrounding country is gentle and pastoral. There are occasional wooded
ridges, and there are mountains, blue and dreamy along the horizon, that are
as calmly beautiful as the “Delectable Mountains” of John Bunyan’s “Pilgrim’s
Progress”; but the landscape immediately adjoining the lake is nearly always
one of fertile and well-cultivated farm fields. Villages and towns are
frequent, most of them wholly rural, with white houses among elm, maple, and
apple trees, and a church spire or two rising above the foliage. The region
is not an industrial centre. It is off the main thoroughfares of trade, and, so
far as I could judge, even the little manufacturing it had was on the wane. For
instance, at Crown Point were iron-works run until recently; but now the
furnaces are cold, and the smoke no longer drifts from the tall chimneys, and
the huddled, brown-painted homes of the operatives in regular streets with
their distressing alikeness and barrenness of surroundings are all vacant. “It ain’t
easy to make small plants pay nowadays,” explained a native, “and this one
busted up and went to pieces last year.” In Crown Point Village But if
things looked rather dismal around the Crown Point iron-works by the lakeside,
the town up the hill seemed to be unaffected by the disaster — a simple, pleasant
country place, the abode of farmers and a few shopkeepers. It had a
delightfully sleepy, easy-going air as I saw it one spring day. A man on his
way to the fields was driving two horses attached to a plough through the
street, a carriage was hitched in front of a store while the owner was inside
doing some trading, and on the door-sill of another store sat two men visiting. I rambled
on past the common with its flagstaff and its soldiers’ monument of the usual
type — a column bearing the names of several of the most important battles of
the Rebellion with a standing soldier on top, — and I kept on until I left the
central village. The houses became scattering, and there were rough hollows
given up to pasturage, and, athwart the west, were forest-clad mountains. That
it was spring with summer coming was very apparent from the work going forward
about the homes — woodpiles being wheeled in from the yards to the sheds, the
scratching together and setting on fire heaps of brush and rubbish, and the
sowing and planting in the gardens. When a garden was near the road it always
attracted the interest of passers, and if a man going along on foot found his
neighbor at work with his hoe in the garden plot, he was apt to lean over the
fence and get and give some agricultural advice, and at the same time swap the
latest items of local news. On my way
back to the town I encountered a small boy, slopping about the borders of a
marshy roadside pool, looking for frogs. He had captured two of the creatures
and was carrying them in one hand by the hind legs. The boy was perfectly
oblivious of the fact that the frogs had feeling. Their distress was naught to
him. He had no purpose in catching them beyond idle curiosity — the
gratification of some savage aboriginal instinct. When I produced a penny, he
willingly set the frogs free and started off in a beeline for the nearest
candy store. A man not
far away, repairing a zigzag rail fence, had paused in the process of driving
in a stake to watch the frog transaction. He was a stubby, elderly man, with a
brush of gray whiskers under his chin. “There’s
plenty of them creeturs this year,” he said, as the boy disappeared; “I got a
pond near my house and the frogs holler so nights in that air pond, I can’t
hardly sleep. Last Sunday, I believe it was, I got up out o’ bed about ‘leven
o’clock and went down and flung some stones at ‘em. They stopped then, but they
was all goin’ it bad as ever by the time I got back to the house.” “How many
cows do you keep in this pasture of yours?” I inquired, changing the subject. “Thirteen.” “Isn’t
that an unlucky number?” “Maybe ‘tis, but I know I get more from those thirteen than some of my neighbors do from twice as many. I was born and raised on the other side of the lake. They know how to farm over there, and they’re bringin’ no end o’ produce acrost every year that we had ought to raise ourselves. You see this ‘ere lot up the hill here next to my pastur’. It belongs to the man that lives in that green and yellow house just beyond the church, and there ain’t no better land in the state of New York, but he gets mighty slim crops off’n it. I’d like to see a Vermont man farm that lot awhile. If you ain’t never been around in the country over the lake, you’d better pay it a visit; and there’s old Fort Frederick, too, over there at Chimley Point, you’d like to see.” [
MENDING THE PASTURE FENCE But
instead of visiting Vermont and Chimney Point I went southward to Ticonderoga.
I made a blundering journey; for I learned, after going sadly astray, that if
one would leave the train at the station nearest the ancient fortress, he must
alight neither at Ticonderoga nor at Fort Ticonderoga, but at a place called
Addison Junction. This last is not a town. It is not even a village. The
habitations consist of a farm-house or two and several rusty little dwellings
in which live workers on the railroad. I arrived
in the late afternoon, and my first care was to find a place to stay over
night. Close by the tracks, next the station, was a small house marked
“Restaurant.” The station-master assured me I would have no difficulty in
getting lodging there, though the prospect of doing so seemed to me rather
dismal, but he proved to be right. The restaurant part consisted of a single
small room with a counter across the rear. A short glass case on the counter
contained a display of cigars, and the wall behind was built up with shelves
scantily set with bottles and a few boxes of plug tobacco. The house was kept
by North of England people. They had come over twenty years before, but they
still retained their peculiar home accent, said “Ay” instead of “Yes,” and
constantly addressed me as “Sir”; while the hired girl, after the English
fashion, called the landlady “the Missus.” The latter was setting the supper
table when I came in, and soon informed me the meal was ready. After I
had eaten, as it was too late to hunt up the old fortress, I loitered down to a
ferry not far from my stopping-place. The ferryman was doing some tinkering on
shore, and the boat was fastened for the night. It was a flat-bottomed scow
that would carry comfortably about three teams. The power used was steam, but
many Champlain ferry-boats employ sails instead, thus obliging whoever runs one
of the craft to coax it along with oars, or by poling, when the wind is light. All through
the winter the lake is frozen over, and the ice makes an excellent bridge. “You
can drive anywhere on it,” said the ferryman, “but mostly they only go from
shore to shore, unless they fix up a track for a hoss race.” “Are there
ever any accidents?” I inquired. “Well, yes, folks are apt to get careless, and they keep goin’ after the ice begins to rot in the spring. The last man that broke through here was a Dutchman by the name of Schwillbug or something of that sort. He was a pedler and he had a fine hoss, and a cart that was all painted up slick as you please. Over on the other side there seems to be a little current at the end of the ferry wharf, and we mostly don’t go off the ice right on to the wharf but take a turn out around it. We told the Dutchman how this was, but he knew better and said there was no danger whatever. So he drove straight for the wharf and in he went. He got out himself, but he lost his cart and he lost his hoss.” A LAKE CHAMPLAIN FERRY The sun
had set while I lingered at the ferry. Now in the deepening dusk I walked far
up over a western hill, at first through the woods and then between pastures
and occasional cultivated fields. I went on till from the brow of a hill I
overlooked a low valley, a-twinkle with the cheerful lights of a town. A whippoorwill
was calling from a woodland hollow, and numerous blundering beetles were.
rising from the grass and buzzing amid the new leafage of the trees. Here and
there were houses on the upland, and as I went back I noted them more
particularly. They were little, clapboarded, unpainted cabins that bore a close
resemblance to the negro hut of the South. Some of them were scarcely large
enough to contain one decent-sized room, but I suppose they usually had at
least a kitchen, a bedroom and, overhead, a low chamber. Most of the dwellings
had an accompaniment of sheds and a small barn, and the premises were strewn
with litter and unsheltered tools and vehicles. Under the eaves of each house
was a water-barrel and, close by, a nondescript and meagre pile
of wood still uncut. Apparently the inmates never got a supply of stove wood
ready ahead, but daily used axe and saw when necessity compelled. The hamlet
was a characteristic community of poor whites — a gathering of the shiftless, the
unenergetic and unambitious, and to some extent of the vicious. I inquired
later about these people, questioning if there was not a prospect of their
bettering themselves and whether their poverty was a necessity. “They live
along from year to year just about the same,” was the reply, “and I can’t say
as they improve any. They could get ahead if they was a min’ to. But what some
folks don’t spend on eatables they spend on drinkables, and that’s the whole
secret of it.” At my lodging-place, when I returned, “Kit” the hired girl was putting on her things preparatory to going to a neighbor’s to watch with a sick woman for the night. “She’s got the typhoid,” Kit explained, “and the Missus and me and quite a number of women around here go in and help what we can. Land’s sake! I do’ know what they’d do if we didn’t, though they’ve got the handiest little girl there I ever see. She’s only ten, poor little soul, but she’s a worker, and she can cook as well as a grown person. Her father’s a brakeman on the railroad, and he says since his wife’s been sick he’s never come home but that girl of hisn’s had the victuals ready right on time. When she ain’t nothing else to do she likes to sit and rock and read. She’s a regular old grandma — that’s what she is. There’s six children and she’s the oldest. She takes good care of the little shavers, specially the baby. Yesterday I gave her an apple and ‘stead of eating it herself she pared it and gave it to the baby. He was sitting on the floor with it when I come away and she said, ‘You bet he’ll keep a-lappin’ that till he’s lapped it all down.’ Well, I must be goin’ or that girl’ll lock the door and go to bed.” Rhubarb The next
morning was fair and warm. The meadows were jubilant with bobolinks, and great
numbers of swallows that had homes in the lakeside banks were darting hither
and thither. I made an early start and turned my footsteps toward the old fort.
It was barely a quarter of a mile from the station in a direct line, but the
route thither was by a devious farm road through the fields. This road was
little used and was hardly more than a few wheel ruts cutting into the turf. It
went through several bar-ways and two or three dooryards and ended at a pasture
gate which was wired so securely I was compelled to clamber over. In the
pasture a herd of ponies was feeding and they came nibbling toward me to
investigate. But when they discovered that I was bound for the ancient fortifications,
they seemed to lose interest and left me to my fate. On the highest slope of
the pasture I had seen from afar a group of ruins. The more prominent of them
were the gray, ragged stone walls of what had been the officers’ barracks.
These were hardly massive or extensive enough to be exactly imposing, yet they
looked satisfactorily historic and they gained much from their striking
situation. The land falls away to the north and west very gradually, but to the
east and south it drops in steep bluffs and green-turfed declivities to the
lake, and the height commands the waterway most thoroughly. The crowning ridge
of the pasture was upheaved in a chaos of stone walls, great ditches, and
grass-grown banks, and there were lesser fortifications scattered over a
considerable area neighboring. The walls of some of the old barracks were yet
fairly intact, and I could see what had been their original height and where
had been the windows and the fireplaces; but our climate is not kindly to
ruins, and the stones are constantly dropping and the walls crumbling. It is a
wild, neglected spot. The mullein grows stoutly here and there, and I found the
mounds and ditches much overrun with clumps of thorn trees and cedars and by a
thicket of little poplars with their leaves a-flutter in the breeze. The sole
garrison of the place seemed to be a woodchuck. He saw me coming while I was
still at a considerable distance and hastened toward his hole in one of the
earthworks. But his curiosity was greater than his discretion, and he would
make a little run and then pause to learn what were my intentions. When he
reached the mouth of his hole, he waited until I came within two rods of him.
Then he dove down out of sight. I stood a few moments to see whether he had
gone for good, and shortly he poked his nose out again, and I am not sure but
that he had his eyes on me all the time that I spent in the vicinity of his
citadel. Few places on our continent excel Ticonderoga in historic attraction.
Even the name is sonorous and heroic, and its capture by Ethan Allen is one of
the best-remembered events of the Revolution. The victory was a bloodless one,
yet the story has many picturesque accessories that stir patriotic enthusiasm.
Western Massachusetts and Vermont were at that time sparsely settled, and the
greater portion of them and of northern New York was an undisturbed wilderness.
Roadways were few and it was customary for travellers going north and south in
this district to take advantage of the natural highway furnished by the
Hudson, Lakes George and Champlain, and the Richelieu River. To secure this
route to themselves the French had long before pushed southward from Canada and
built frequent blockhouses and other defences; and in 1735 they erected Fort
Carillon, or as it was afterward known, Fort Ticonderoga, the strongest
fortress on American soil. So powerful was it that its existence caused not a
little anxiety in England. An attempt was made by the English to capture it in
1758, but after repeated assaults and great losses the attacking force
retreated utterly demoralized toward Albany. The next year another large force
advanced on Carillon and the French blew up that and the rest of the forts
along the lake and fell hack to Canada. Ticonderoga Ruins By the
English the stronghold was rebuilt and its name changed to Ticonderoga, the
Indian name of a neighboring waterfall. Because of the strength and importance
of Ticonderoga’s location, the Colonies at the beginning of the Revolution were
naturally anxious to possess it. The initiative toward accomplishing this
object was taken by several gentlemen in Connecticut, who got together secretly
at Hartford, in April, 1775, and having found certain persons willing to engage
in the enterprise, furnished them with funds to buy supplies and defray the
other expenses that might be incurred. These persons set off immediately for
Bennington, Vermont, with the intention of getting Colonel Ethan Allen to join
in the undertaking and help raise an adequate force for the capture of the
fort. On the way their numbers grew to about sixty, and a hundred more men were
soon added from the hills of the New Hampshire Grants, as Vermont was then
called. A vote was then taken, to determine who should be the leader, and the
honor was awarded to Colonel Allen. Meanwhile,
a committee in eastern Massachusetts, unaware of the action of the Connecticut
conclave, appointed Benedict Arnold, who was then at Cambridge,
“commander-in-chief” over a body of men not exceeding four hundred which he was
directed to enlist, and with them to reduce the fort at Ticonderoga. To carry
this commission into effect Arnold promptly proceeded to the western part of
the state, where he learned, much to his chagrin, that his plan had been
forestalled. He then hastened with a single attendant to join the little band
in Vermont, and on the 8th of May overtook the Green Mountain Boys just as
they had completed their preparations and
were about to set forth. But Arnold had no sooner arrived than he
asserted the right to take command of the entire expedition, alleging that this
was his due by virtue of his commission from the Massachusetts committee. To
this high-handed claim the rank and file of the troop strenuously objected.
They chose to go tinder their own officers or not at all, and were for
“clubbing their muskets and marching home.” Indeed, such a mutiny arose that
the whole design was almost frustrated. But the matter was finally settled, and
Arnold was to some extent placated by being assigned an honorary place and
allowed to move at the head of the column on Colonel Allen’s left. The
Americans by the night of the 9th had contrived to cross the lake, and lay
near the fort waiting for daybreak. With the first hint of morning light Allen
led his followers to the entrance of the fort. The gate was shut, but the
wicket was open, and though the sentry snapped his fusee, before the alarm he
gave could summon his comrades, the Americans had dashed into the fort and
raised the Indian warwhoop. Little resistance was offered. The few soldiers on
guard, after a shot or two, threw down their arms, and Allen strode to the
quarters of Delaplace, the commandant. As he reached the door Delaplace
appeared in his night garments and listened in amazement to the demand for the
surrender of the fort. “By what
authority?” asked the startled Briton. “In the
name of the great Jehovah and the Continental Congress,” was Allen’s reply. The
assault was entirely unexpected, the surprise was complete, and the valuable
fortress, with its large equipment of cannon and ammunition, fell into the
hands of the Americans at a very
opportune time. Within the
next two years they made Ticonderoga a stronghold that they thought well-nigh
impregnable. They threw up numerous outlying defences, erected Fort
Independence on the bluffs across the lake and connected the two forts with a
sunken bridge. One of the great logs of this bridge was not long ago detached
and brought to the shore, and an old farmer with whom I talked told me he had a
portion of it at his house. “Some say
wood in the water’ll rot,” said he, “but it won’t. You keep wood in the water
all the time, or you keep it perfectly dry all the time, and it’ll last forever.
It’s wet and dry raises the mischief. This log that they pulled up had lain
there and never seen the air in more than a hundred years, and it was as sound
as a Spanish milled dollar.” In spite
of all the Americans did in strengthening Ticonderoga, it failed them at a most
critical time; for when Burgoyne reached it on his famous invasion, they were
obliged to ingloriously abandon their elaborately prepared defences without a
shot. To the southwest, on the other side of Ticonderoga Creek, or “Ti Crick,”
as it is called locally, rise the steep wooded sides of Mt. Defiance. The
Americans had fancied the height was one which could not be scaled with cannon,
and when the British accomplished this, Ticonderoga was at their mercy, and the
Americans could do nothing but get out. However,
the earlier investment of the place by Ethan Allen is the better recalled. It
was far more dramatic — “And yet,” commented the old farmer whom I have
previously quoted, “nothing was ever more foolhardy. Allen was completely in
the power of the
British. He played ‘em a trick and the trick worked. It was just luck. If he
hadn’t succeeded, we’d all
say what a crazy notion it was. Same way with Funston capturing Aguinaldo out
in the Philippines. He come out all right, but it was chance just the same,
and it’d been a foolish business if he’d failed.” The Pasture in which stand the Old Fortifications |