John Hardin

Colonel John Hardin (October 1, 1753 – circa May 1792) was a soldier, farmer, rancher, noted marksman and hunter. He was wounded fighting in Lord Dunmore's War; served as a Continental Army officer in the American Revolutionary War and as a Kentucky Co., Virginia militia commander in the Northwest Indian War. He was a member of the Methodist church and one of the first judges in the original Washington County, Virginia (later to become Washington County, KY). Colonel Hardin was killed in an ambush while acting as a peace emissary (under the direction of the President, George Washington) to the Shawnee Indian people.

John Hardin
Birth nameJohn Hardin
Nickname(s)The Indian Killer
BornOctober 1, 1753
Prince William County, Virginia
DiedMay 1792
Turtle Creek, Ohio
Allegiance Kingdom of Great Britain
 United States
Service/branch Virginia militia
Continental Army
 United States Army
RankColonel
Unit8th Pennsylvania Regiment
Battles/wars1st Battle at Saratoga
Harmar Campaign
Spouse(s)Jane Daviess
ChildrenDaviess Hardin
Lydia Ann Hardin
Mark Hardin
Mary Hardin
Rosanna Hardin
Sarah Hardin
Martin D. Hardin
Other workJudge of Washington County, Virginia

Early life

Born in Prince William County, Virginia (in an area that is now Fauquier County), John Hardin was the first son and fifth child of Martin Hardin (1716–1778), an owner of an "ordinary" (or roadhouse/bar) who was a member of the Virginia militia, and Lydia [nee Waters] Hardin (1721–1800). John Hardin married Jane Daviess, and together they had seven children, with future Kentucky senator, Martin D. Hardin, their youngest.

Military life

Lord Dunmore's War

Due to his reputation as a marksman, Hardin was asked in 1774 to join Capt. Zack Moran's company, mustering in as an ensign to fight hostile Indians in Lord Dunmore's War. Hardin's exploits led to him become known on the frontier as "The Indian Killer". In a battle with the Indians, Hardin was wounded in the groin by a musket ball. The musket ball remained in him for the rest of his life.

Revolutionary War

In the War of Independence, John Hardin was a 2nd Lieutenant in the 8th Pennsylvania Regiment, better known as "The Provisional Rifle Corps" (or Morgan's Rifles), and fought at Saratoga, while serving directly under Colonel Daniel Morgan.

Later life

In 1786, the Hardin family settled on a large parcel of land in Washington County, Virginia (now Washington County, Kentucky), where they farmed and raised stock. They also joined the Methodist church in that area. Hardin had some success as a rancher, continually adding acreage to his original tract.

Later militia service

As a militia captain in 1786, John Hardin led a successful attack on a Piankeshaw village near present-day Vincennes, Indiana which, unfortunately, belonged to a friendly tribe that had been colonial American allies.[1]

In August 1789, he led another militia expedition to the Terre Haute, Indiana area where he attacked a Shawnee party of 22 men, women, and children.[2]. Three women, one child, and an infant were killed in the attack.[2] Hardin paraded through Vincennes, where Major Jean François Hamtramck lamented that the uneasy peace he had brokered with the Wabash nations would soon end due to the "provocation" of "this Kentucky affair."[2] Hardin returned to Kentucky with twelve scalps.[3]

Hardin was promoted to colonel and repeatedly engaged Indians during the Northwest Indian War in the Ohio Territory. In 1790, he led a detachment of the Kentucky County, Virginia militia on the disastrous Battle of Heller's Corner (also known as 'Hardin's Defeat'). Their rout began a long succession of American losses to Miami chief, Little Turtle. In 1791, Hardin led a force of 60 Kentucky mounted militia in the destruction of a large Kickapoo village near the mouth of the Big Pine Creek, as part of General Charles Scott's campaign to destroy Ouiatenon.[4]

Final service

In April 1792, President George Washington sent word to Hardin asking him to negotiate a peace with the Shawnee. Soon thereafter, in the area that is now Shelby County, Ohio, John Hardin met with a party of the Shawnee, who offered to escort him to their village. Instead, they attacked him and murdered him as he slept. Also killed was a servant of Hardin's, identified simply by his last name, Freeman. Another of the party, a guide named John Flinn - who had lived among the Indians after being captured by them as a boy - survived, later settling in Miami County, Ohio.

Legacy

Namesake places

Relations

Notes

  1. Allison, pg 56
  2. Sword, p. 77
  3. Allison, pg 67
  4. Allison, 77
  5. Sutton's "History of Shelby County Ohio".p.270
  6. U.S. Congressional Biography; Hardin; Martin
  7. U.S. Congressional Biography; Hardin, John J.
  8. U.S. Congressional Biography; Hardin, Benjamin
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References

  • Allison, Harold (1986). The Tragic Saga of the Indiana Indians. Turner Publishing Company, Paducah. ISBN 0-938021-07-9.
  • Sword, Wiley (1985). President Washington's Indian War: The Struggle for the Old Northwest, 1790-1795. Norman and London: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-1864-4.
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