Something
that started in Tennessee and spilled over into Simpsom County,
KY on Sept. 23, 1826 could have changed the history of Texas.
At the time, Sam
Houston had just begun his second Congressional term. The 24-year-old
Virginian-cum-Tennessean had proven himself an adroit politician,
albeit one who preferred telling it as he saw it rather than speaking
out of both sides of his mouth. In an era when saying what you thought
could get you challenged to a duel, candor amounted to a risky trait.
When Nashville’s postmaster resigned, some 650 Tennesseans endorsed
his number-two man as his successor. The younger man had been assistant
postmaster for a number of years and stood fully qualified to take
over the job. Houston and all but one member of the state’s Congressional
delegation supported the man’s appointment.
Fine and good,
but the John Adams administration instead appointed newspaper editor
John P. Erwin to the post. Though far less qualified than the assistant
postmaster, Erwin had something else going for him: His brother
had married Secretary of State Henry Clay’s daughter.
In a letter to the president, Houston strongly protested the flagrant
nepotism, pointing out that Erwin lacked “fair and upright moral
character.” And on the floor of the House, the young congressman
assailed Erwin’s “want of integrity.” But cronyism trumped qualification.
Erwin had his political plum but now he wanted “satisfaction” in
an “affair of honor,” a violent Southern custom better known as
a duel.
The
new postmaster and his friends shopped around for a second to deliver
Houston the necessary written challenge, but the congressman enjoyed
considerable popularity around Nashville and no one could be found
to take on the job. Lacking someone local, Erwin’s friends found
a professional duelist from Missouri, one John T. Smith. (That’s
believed to have been an assumed name for obvious reasons.)
Houston had been in Washington while all this was going on. When
word reached town that the congressman was on his way to his district,
on the day he was expected to arrive by stagecoach his friends and
supporters of the postmaster gathered at the Nashville Inn to await
his arrival.
One of Houston’s friends was a Col. McGregor, who would cheerfully
stand as his second. Soon after Houston hit town, Smith approached
McGregor in front of the inn.
Willoughby Williams, one of Houston’s many Nashville friends, told
the story of what happened next in a letter he wrote on April 1,
1878 – more than a half-century later.
“I have a communication from Col. Irwin to Gen. Houston, which I
now hand to you, sir,” Smith said.
Smith then attempted
to give the note to McGregor.
“I can receive no communication through your hands from Col. Irwin,”
McGregor said. [Another version has him adding “because you are
not a citizen of this state,” which is probably accurate.]
At that point, Smith dropped the note on the ground in front of
Houston’s friend and walked off.
“The crowd rushed into the hall of the inn, where Gen. Houston was
standing, greatly relieved that there was no fight between McGregor
and Smith,” Williams wrote.
But the matter hadn’t ended.
“Gen.
William White, a brave and chivalric gentleman, remarked that he
did not ‘think the proper courtesy had been extended to Col. Smith,”
Williams continued in his letter.
Hearing that, Houston said: “If you, sir, have any grievance, I
will give you any satisfaction you may demand.”
“I have nothing to do with your difficulty, but I presume to know
what is due from one gentleman to another,” White answered.
The next day, word had it that Houston had “backed down” White,
a lawyer who had fought in the Battle of New Orleans. Hearing that,
White sent Houston a formal challenge to a duel and Houston readily
accepted.
Even
though common, dueling was not legal. Accordingly, warrants were
sworn out for the arrest of White and Houston
and given to Sheriff Joseph W. Horton to serve.
Whether White got arrested is unclear, but according to Williams,
Houston heard
about the warrant and promptly left town. After stopping for a visit
with Andrew Jackson at the Hermitage, Houston
repaired to a friend’s home in another county.
The next day, he sent a messenger to Nashville to notify White that
he would be happy to meet him in Kentucky “on a certain day.”
At
sunrise on Sept. 23 in Simpson County, Houston
and White shook hands, walked off 15 paces and turned to face each
other with flintlock pistols. White missed; Houston
did not.
Houston, as
it turned out, had been practicing at the Hermitage, where his friend
and future U.S. president urged him to bite down on a bullet to
improve his aim. Either that worked or Houston
simply proved a better shot.
Hit in the groin, White lay on the ground expecting to die. True
to the code, the two erstwhile combatants shook hands and White
said he had no hard feelings about being killed by Houston
in a fair fight.
“I am very sorry,” Houston
said, “but you know it was forced upon me.”
Fortunately for White and to the great relief of Houston,
the wounded man recovered. A grand jury in Kentucky indicted Houston
for assault, but the case never proceeded.
If William White had been any better a shot, the story of Texas
would have played out a lot differently.
© Mike Cox
- February
19, 2012 column
More "Texas
Tales"
|