Simon Girty Turncoat Hero The Most Hated man on the Early American Frontier
by Phillip W. Hoffman
The subject of this masterful, panoramic biography is one of
the most mysterious, misunderstood icons of early American history. Simon Girty was a sharp-witted, rascally,
many-tongued frontiersman whose epic adventures span the French and Indian War,
Dunmore’s War, the American War for Independence,
the Indian Wars, and finally, the War of 1812.
When he defected from the Patriot cause to serve the British
in March 1778, Girty achieved instant infamy – becoming one of young America’s most
notorious characters. To understand his
motivation one must discover, as he did, that the real, underlying cause of the
American Revolution was the unquenchable thirst for Indian land of many of our
so-called founding fathers – including George Washington – and their
unrelenting dissatisfaction with the restrictions imposed upon their land
speculation ambitions by the King’s Proclamation of 1763.
Like a detective doggedly combing through old evidence,
author Phillip Hoffman spent 17 years studying every detail of Girty’s life and
times, amassing more than 4,000 computer windows of research. By exploring microfilm, ledgers, military
records, congressional records, newspaper and magazine articles, and dozens of
early American and Canadian fiction and non-fiction works, Hoffman was able to
peel away the mythic legend that has hidden Girty’s real persona for two and a
half centuries.
Little in Simon Girty’s life was conventional or
predictable. One of four sons raised by
an Irish Indian trader settled near Harrisburg in eastern Pennsylvania, Simon’s
earliest experiences quickly isolate him from the majority of the colonists in
his region, most of whom were German immigrants. To these people, the Girtys are Indian
lovers, and the Indians are all savages and spawn of the devil. When he is nine, the untimely murder of his
father ushers in a new, increasingly violent stage in young Girty’s life. During the French and Indian War, when he is
fifteen, Simon and his family are captured by hostile Shawnee
and Delaware
warriors led by French officers. Given
away to a war party of Senecas, Simon is carried north and adopted, emerging
eight years later at age twenty-three, a gifted linguist and a trained
interpreter fluent in eleven native languages.
Brought by a Seneca chief to Alexander McKee of the British
Indian Department at Fort Pitt, Girty begins his career as a
spy-interpreter-intermediary serving both English and Native American
leaders. Girty’s contacts include the
great Seneca sachem Guyasuta, Sir William Johnson, merchant George Morgan,
businessman John Connolly, William Crawford, Matthew Elliott, John Murray (Lord
Dunmore), Simon Kenton, George Rogers Clark, Mingo chief John Logan, Mohawk
chief Joseph Brant, Half King of the Wyandots, Captain Pipe of the Delawares,
Moravian missionaries David Zeisberger and John Heckewelder, Shawnee chiefs
Blue Jacket and Tecumseh, and Miami war chief Little Turtle, Detroit Governor
Henry Hamilton, U.S. general Anthony Wayne, and even Daniel Boone. Land speculators George Washington and Ben
Franklin are also woven through Girty’s story.
Through Girty’s eyes we re-live the ill-fated Squaw
Campaign, his rescue of Simon Kenton whom the Shawnees were about to torture
and burn, the deadly ambush of Rogers’ Flotilla, the Battle of Sandusky,
William Crawford’s trial and death by fire, the conquest of Martin’s and
Ruddle’s Stations, the disastrous American defeat at Blue Licks (where Daniel
Boone’s son Israel was killed), and the incredible victories over Harmar and
St. Clair by a confederation of Western and Northern Tribes. Finally, with Girty and his companions Alex
McKee and Matthew Elliott, we witness the climactic defeat of the Indians by
“Mad” Anthony Wayne at Fallen Timbers.
In the early 19th century, the most feared and
hated man on the American frontier spends his last years in Canada, blind,
crippled and a shadow of his former self. Even so, there remains a $1,000 American bounty on his head, and even
then, there are frontiersmen and warriors on both sides of the Canadian border
who respect and remember him fondly. To
the Mohawks, Simon Girty will become an “Indian Patriot.”
Hoffman’s dedication to detail, combined with his superb
talent as a storyteller, brings us an intimate view of the full sweep of early
American frontier conflicts, as experienced by a devoted adventurer whose heart
was as much Indian as it was white. The author's erudite, yet accessible style makes this book a pleasure to read and savor. Simon Girty Turncoat Hero is American history at its best. Author: Phillip W. Hoffman
Pages: 360, including Dedication, Table of Contents, Cast of Characters, Appendix, Acknowledgments, and Index Note: Appendix includes extensive genealogy of the Girty family Published: April 2008
ISBN: 0-9753667-6-9
Format: Casebound hardback 6 x 9"
"Hoffman casts a clarifying light on one of the most misunderstood men in American history" - John Mack Faragher, Yale University Daniel Boone: The Life and Legend of an American Pioneer
"At Last! Hoffman has done what the vast majority who have written about Simon Girty have failed to do: he has shown this very remarkable individual as neither renegade nor traitor; rather as the man of principle and courage that he truly was. Bravo!" - Allan W. Eckert Wilderness Empire, The Frontiersman and other works about the early American frontier.
"This is a terrific book, very well grounded in the primary source material, well organized, and well written. Simon Girty Turncoat Hero does for Girty what Faragher did for Boone, namely carefully examines a mythic American figure, strips away the layers of legend, and allows a crisply drawn historic figure to emerge." - Larry L. Nelson, Ph.D. A Man of Distinction Among Them: Alexander McKee and British Indian Affairs Along the Ohio Country Frontier
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