On October 23, 1711, Baron Christoph von Graffenried, founder of the Swiss colony of New Bern, penned a lengthy description of his capture by the Tuscarora Indians.
In mid-September of that year, von Graffenried and John Lawson led a surveying expedition up the Neuse River. Lawson was the Surveyor General of the colony and was well-known to the Indians. When the Indians discovered the party in their territory, and unannounced to their leader Chief Hancock, they captured the men and took them to the Tuscarora village of Catechna, near present-day Grifton.
The Indians were angry over encroachment on their lands and they believed the surveying party was out to take more. Graffenried was spared, but Lawson was executed. Held at the village for several weeks, von Graffenried, bargained for the safety of the New Bern colony. Nevertheless the Tuscarora, in alliance with other aggravated tribes, attacked settlements on the Pamlico, Neuse and Trent Rivers, and in the Core Sound region in what would become known as the Tuscarora War.
After his release from the Tuscarora, von Graffenried wrote his account of the ordeal in order to explain Lawson’s fate and to clarify the promises that he made to the Indians during his capture.
Other related resources:
- The Tuscarora Indians and other articles related to the Tuscarora War on NCpedia
- Resources on Native American Heritage from the State Library of North Carolina
- Tryon Palace
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