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David Crockett: His Life and Adventures, by John S. C. Abbott
Published: Dodd & Mead, New York, 1874
CONTENTS:
PREFACE
CHAPTER I. Parentage and Childhood.
The Emigrant. -- Crossing the Alleghanies. -- The Boundless Wilderness. --
The Hut on the Holston. -- Life's Necessaries. -- The Massacre. -- Birth
of David Crockett. -- Peril of the Boys. -- Anecdote. -- Removal to
Greenville; to Cove Creek. -- Increased Emigration. -- Loss of the
Mill. -- The Tavern. -- Engagement with the Drover. -- Adventures in the
Wilderness. -- Virtual Captivity. -- The Escape. -- The Return. -- The
Runaway. -- New Adventures. . . . 7
CHAPTER II. Youthful Adventures.
David at Gerardstown. -- Trip to Baltimore. -- Anecdotes. -- He ships for
London. -- Disappointment. -- Defrauded of his Wages. -- Escapes. -- New
Adventures. -- Crossing the River. -- Returns Home. -- His Reception. -- A
Farm Laborer. -- Generosity to his Father. -- Love Adventure. -- The Wreck
of his Hopes. -- His School Education. -- Second Love adventure. -- Bitter
Disappointment. -- Life in the Backwoods. -- Third Love Adventure. . . . 35
CHAPTER III. Marriage and Settlement.
Rustic Courtship. -- The Rival Lover. -- Romantic Incident. The Purchase
of a Horse. -- The Wedding. -- Singular Ceremonies. -- The Termagant. --
Bridal Days. -- They commence Housekeeping. -- The Bridal mansion and
Outfit. -- Family Possessions. -- The Removal to Central Tennessee. --
Mode of Transportation. -- The New Income and its Surroundings. -- Busy
Idleness. -- The Third Move. -- The Massacre at Fort Mimms. . . . 54
CHAPTER IV. The Soldier Life.
War with the Creeks. -- Patriotism of Crockett. -- Remonstrances of his
Wife. -- Enlistment. -- The Rendezvous. -- Adventure of the Scouts. --
Friendly Indians, -- A March through the Forest. -- Picturesque Scene. --
The Midnight Alarm. -- March by Moonlight. -- Chagrin of Crockett. --
Advance into Alabama. -- War's Desolations. -- Indian Stoicism. --
Anecdotes of Andrew Jackson. -- Battles, Carnage, and Woe. . . . 93
CHAPTER V. Indian Warfare.
The Army at Fort Strother. -- Crockett's Regiment. -- Crockett at Home. --
His Reenlistment. -- Jackson Surprised. -- Military Ability of the
Indians. -- Humiliation of the Creeks. -- March to Florida. -- Affairs at
Pensacola. -- Capture of the City. -- Characteristics of Crockett. -- The
Weary March, -- Inglorious Expedition. -- Murder of Two Indians. --
Adventures at the Island. -- The Continued March. -- Severe Sufferings. --
Charge upon the Uninhabited Village. . . . 124
CHAPTER VI. The Camp and the Cabin.
Deplorable Condition of the Army. -- Its wanderings. -- Crockett's
Benevolence. -- Cruel Treatment of the Indians. -- A Gleam of Good
Luck. -- The Joyful Feast. -- Crockett's Trade with the Indian. -- Visit
to the Old Battlefield. -- Bold Adventure of Crockett. -- His Arrival
Home. -- Death of his Wife. -- Second Marriage. -- Restlessness. --
Exploring Tour. -- Wild Adventures. -- Dangerous Sickness. -- Removal to
the West. -- His New Home. . . . 155
CHAPTER VII. The Justice of Peace and the Legislator.
Vagabondage. -- Measures of Protection. -- Measures of Government. --
Crockett's Confession. -- A Candidate for Military Honors. -- Curious
Display of Moral Courage. -- The Squirrel Hunt. -- A Candidate for the
Legislature. -- Characteristic Electioneering. -- Specimens of his
Eloquence. -- Great Pecuniary Calamity. -- Expedition to the Far West. --
Wild Adventures. -- The Midnight Carouse. -- A Cabin Reared. . . . 183
CHAPTER VIII. Life on the Obion.
Hunting Adventures. -- The Voyage up the River. -- Scenes in the Cabin. --
Return Home. -- Removal of the Family. -- Crockett's Riches. -- A Perilous
Enterprise. -- Reasons for his Celebrity. -- Crockett's Narrative. -- A
Bear-Hunt. -- Visit to Jackson. -- Again a Candidate for the
Legislature. -- Electioneering and Election. . . . 212
CHAPTER IX. Adventures in the Forest, on the River, and in the City.
The Bear Hunter's Story. -- Service in the Legislature. -- Candidate for
Congress. -- Electioneering. -- The New Speculation. -- Disastrous
Voyage. -- Narrow Escape. -- New Electioneering Exploits. -- Odd
Speeches. -- The Visit to Crockett's Cabin. -- His Political Views. -- His
Honesty. -- Opposition to Jackson. -- Scene at Raleigh. -- Dines with the
President. -- Gross Caricature. -- His Annoyance. . . . 240
CHAPTER X. Crockett's Tour to the North and the East.
His Reelection to Congress. -- The Northern Tour. -- First Sight of a
Railroad. -- Reception in Philadelphia. -- His First Speech. -- Arrival in
New York. -- The Ovation there. -- Visit to Boston. -- Cambridge and
Lowell. -- Specimens of his Speeches. -- Expansion of his Ideas. -- Rapid
Improvement. . . . 267
CHAPTER XI. The Disappointed Politician. -- Off for Texas.
Triumphal Return. -- Home Charms Vanish. -- Loses His Election. -- Bitter
Disappointment. -- Crockett's Poetry. -- Sets out for Texas. -- Incidents
of the Journey. -- Reception at Little Rock. -- The Shooting Match. --
Meeting a Clergyman. -- The Juggler. -- Crockett a Reformer. -- The Bee
Hunter. -- The Rough Strangers. -- Scene on the Prairie. . . . 290
CHAPTER XII. Adventures on the Prairie.
Disappearance of the Bee Hunter. -- The Herd of Buffalo Crockett lost. --
The Fight with the Cougar. -- Approach of Savages. -- Their
Friendliness. -- Picnic on the Prairie. -- Picturesque Scene. -- The Lost
Mustang recovered. -- Unexpected Reunion. -- Departure of the Savages. --
Skirmish with the Mexicans. -- Arrival at the Alamo. . . .312
CHAPTER XIII. Conclusion.
The Fortress of Alamo. -- Colonel Bowie. -- Bombardment of the Fort. --
Crockett's Journal. -- Sharpshooting. -- Fight outside of the Fort. --
Death of the Bee Hunter. -- Kate of Nacogdoches. -- Assault on the
Citadel. -- Crockett a Prisoner. -- His Death. . . . 340
DAVID CROCKETT certainly was not a model man. But he was a representative man. He was conspicuously one of a very numerous class, still existing, and which has heretofore exerted a very powerful influence over this republic. As such, his wild and wondrous life is worthy of the study of every patriot. Of this class, their modes of life and habits of thought, the majority of our citizens know as little as they do of the manners and customs of the Comanche Indians.
No man can make his name known to the forty millions of this great and busy republic who has not something very remarkable in his character or his career. But there is probably not an adult American, in all these widespread States, who has not heard of David Crockett. His life is a veritable romance, with the additional charm of unquestionable truth. It opens to the reader scenes in the lives of the lowly, and a state of semi- civilization, of which but few of them can have the faintest idea.
It has not been my object, in this narrative, to defend Colonel Crockett or to condemn him, but to present his peculiar character exactly as it was. I have therefore been constrained to insert some things which I would gladly have omitted.
JOHN S. C. ABBOTT. FAIR HAVEN, CONN.
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