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WHO IS
THE HALF KING?
The eighteenth-century Seneca
chief known as "The Half King" is a figure so obscure that no
one knows his real name - it was most likely Tanaghrisson, or something
close to it. Tanaghrisson stepped into American history in 1748,
when the Iroquois League designated him leader of the Senecas and
Delawares who had migrated to the upper Ohio valley. Ordinarily an
Iroquois headman who acted as an official spokesman for the League was
called a "King", but because the Ohio Indians were hunters and
warriors without permanent council fire, Tanaghrisson enjoyed only an
abridged authority; hence his title, "Half King." By the
early 1750's English traders and French soldiers began to penetrate the
upper Ohio, and the English seemed likely to threaten the autonomy of
Tanaghrisson and his people the least; they also offered the most abundant
trade goods for him to distribute among his followers. Thus
Tanaghrisson allied himself with traders from Virginia, but he could not
stop the French from building a line of forts from Lake Erie down to the
Forks of the Ohio. In May of 1754, a young Lieutenant Colonel named
George Washington marched several hundred troops to the area to protect
Virginia's interests. The French sent Ensign Jumonville up from Fort
Duquesne to warn them off. Tanaghrisson alerted Washington to the
presence of a French party, guided him to their camp, and encouraged him
to make a surprise attack. Naively,
Washington did just that the morning of May 28, 1754, wounding Jumonville
before he could explain that he had come on a diplomatic mission.
The French called for a ceasefire and tried to parley with their
assailants, but Tanaghrisson cut off the chances for a diplomatic
resolution by bashing in Jumonville's skull and washing his hands in the
dead man's brains. He intended to make it impossible for Washington,
the Virginians, and the British empire as a whole to back out of their
alliance with him, and to use Britain's strength to eject the French from
his land. Tanaghrisson's calculated act triggered events that ranged
unimaginably far beyond his control, however. A French counterattack
quickly escalated into the French and Indian War, which spread to Europe
as the Seven Years' War. By 1763 France's empire lay in ruins and
Britain was in at least theoretical control of the eastern half of North
America. The newly-expanded British Empire proved too unwieldy to
control, however, and 13 years later George Washington would lead colonial
forces against the British in a revolt that would become known as the
American Revolution. --Fred
Anderson, Crucible of War |
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