Kentucky River. Harrodsburg was the initial stockade community to be founded in Kentucky. Less than one year later in April 1775 at a site located 48 miles to the east of Harrodsburg, a group of 30-plus axmen, led by Daniel Boone, established Fort Boone, later renamed Boonesborough. This settlement was established after the troop hacked a trail through the woodlands with a starting point at Long Island of the Holston in eastern Tennessee. Likewise in 1775, Benjamin Logan founded St. Asaph (a.k.a. Logan's Fort and later to become Stanford, Kentucky) situated to the south of Leestown by roughly 60 miles. In 1776, the Virginia legislature introduced the wonderfully named Corn Patch and Cabin Rights Act that promised ownership of 400 acres in the untamed District of Kentucky to anyone willing to brave the weeks'-long journey to erect a log cabin, cultivate corn in Virginia's westernmost region, and survive the attacks by tribal war parties.
British explorer Nicholas Cresswell provided one of the more striking accounts of life on the Kentucky River through his daily journal, written in the years 1774–1777. In several passages from 1775, Cresswell addressed the presence of the Lee brothers in the vicinity of the site of present-day Buffalo Trace Distillery. Cresswell's account on May 23, 1775, reads as follows, “Proceeded up the [Kentucky] River, found several rapids which obliged us to get out and haul our vessel up with ropes. The current stronger than yesterday. Saw several roads that crossed the River which they tell me were made by the Buffaloes going from one lick to another. (These licks are brackish or salt springs which the Buffaloes are fond of.)”
The next day, May 24, Cresswell wrote, “Camped at a place where the Buffaloes cross the River. In the night were alarmed with a plunging in the River … found one of our Canoes that had all our flour on board sunk … It was done by the Buffaloes crossing the River …” Then on Sunday, June 11, 1775, Cresswell reported, “This morning killed a Buffalo Cow crossing the River. Fell down to Elkhorn Creek … Found Captn. Hancock Lee camped at Elkhorn, surveying land … I believe the land is good in general, through the whole track, with several salt springs as I am informed. An immense number of Buffaloes frequent them. Buffaloes are a sort of wild cattle but have a large hump on the top of their shoulders all black, and their necks and shoulders covered with long shaggy hair with large bunches of hair growing on their fore thighs, short horns bending forward, short noses, piercing eyes and beard like a goat … They do not roar like other cattle, but grunt like hogs. Got a large pine canoe out of some drift wood with great labour … Excessively hot.”
Finally on Monday, June 12, Cresswell wrote, “Went to Captn. Lee's camp, who treated me very kindly with a dram of Whiskey and some bread, which at this time is a great luxury with me. Captn. Lee's brother [Willis] gave me a Rattlesnake skin about four feet long.”8 Presumably, Lee had, of course, carried the whiskey from his starting point in Virginia and had not distilled it while on the road.
Hancock Lee's camp on Elkhorn Creek was but four miles as the crow flies east of the great buffalo trace crossing on the Kentucky River. Soon after their encounter with Nicholas Cresswell, he and Willis turned their attention back to the crossing site to plot their own family settlement. A deputy surveyor, George Rogers Clark, who worked under Captain Hancock Lee described the site with obvious gusto in a letter, dated, “Lees Town, Kentucke, July 6th, 1775,” to his brother Jonathan that said, “… A richer and more beautiful country than this I believe has never been seen in America … We have laid out a town seventy miles up ye Kentucke where I intend to live, and I don't doubt that there will be fifty families living in it by Christmas.”9 From this and other descriptions of the crossing, it is simple to understand why the Lees, following the surveys of the McAfees and Hancock Taylor two years earlier, decided to build their initial log lean-tos and storage shelters right there at that spot. “Lying in a sharp bend of the river, near a shallow ford of shelving rock, with a spacious sandy beach on which to land and load or unload canoes and other boats, and with never-failing springs of cold, pure water near at hand, with a large natural meadow in easy reach and a rich bottom of level land sufficiently extensive to provide the settlers with an abundant supply of corn, and with broad buffalo roads radiating to the East and West, it is by no means surprising that this particular spot had attracted the eye of Robert McAfee and Hancock Taylor and was afterwards chosen by Hancock Lee as the site for his town,” addressed Kentucky historian Judge Samuel M. Wilson in his remarks at the 1931 dedication of a marker at the Leestown site. Wilson's speech, titled, Leestown – Its Founders and Its History, was recorded in the Register of the Kentucky State Historical Society.10
On December 27, 1775, Hancock Lee III registered a number of parceled claims in Fincastle County, Virginia, totaling 2,800 acres, with 1,200 acres relating specifically to Leestown. One parcel of 400 acres was described by Lee as being at the “Great Buffalow crossing on Cedar Creek.” Additional claims by Willis and Richard Lee, most adjoining Leestown, secured a significant area of land. In all, the Lees claimed 8,800 acres, the majority in and around Leestown, and smaller plots near Elkhorn Creek.
But, regrettably, the euphoria of the brothers' companion George Rogers Clark and the Lees' own ambitions concerning Leestown collided head-on with the sobering realities of wilderness habitation in northern Kentucky in the last quarter of the eighteenth century. The region's struggling remaining native tribes, specifically the Shawnees and their Iroquois-speaking allies, the Mingos, shared neither the joy nor the optimism of the Lees and their party. Tribal leaders viewed the establishment of Leestown and the other meager compounds in the Bluegrass as aggressive encroachments on their traditional hunting grounds. The founding of populated compounds and deforested fields by the colonials disturbed and reduced the numbers of the game animals. Worse still, the callous murder of a local tribal chief's family members by a throng of Euro-American settlers in 1774 as well as a string of broken treaties with the British likewise fanned the flames of vengeance. Also in 1774, the Battle of Point Pleasant, pitting Virginia Colony militias against the warriors of the Shawnee and Mingo tribes in what is now West Virginia, ended badly for the Shawnees and Mingos. After the fight, the tribes agreed to relinquish their rights to all lands west of the North Carolina and Virginia colonies. This included all of the District of Kentucky.
Thus, amidst the festering rancor between the native tribes and the Euro-Americans, in April of 1776 catastrophe struck when a band of Mingo warriors waded across the great buffalo trace armed with tomahawks and bows and arrows, and rifles and attacked Leestown. In the hand-to-hand skirmish Willis Lee was killed and resident Cyrus McCracken was badly wounded. The few crude log cabins and storage sheds were set ablaze. Leaving their bulky possessions and the incapacitated Willis Lee behind, the handful of ambulatory settlers fled Leestown, scrambling their way through miles of dense forest and across open pasture to the relative safety of Boonesborough. Some historians have viewed the shooting of Hancock Taylor that occurred two years earlier in the same light of tribal retribution. Whatever the case, with shocking abruptness, any sense of secure occupancy at the river landing christened Leestown was shattered. Even though this single attack could hardly be characterized as a major battle when compared to other confrontations, the ferocity and swiftness of its nature became the topic of conversation that planting season at every campfire and fortified homestead in the Bluegrass. Consequently, the Shawnee and Mingo tribes were demonized, making them the targets of the subsequent wrath of the Euro-American settlers.
From the mid-1770s to the early 1780s, the severity and number of the hostilities between settlers and the agitated native tribes made passage throughout the Bluegrass untenable. Blood-curdling tales of the horrendous tortures, including being burned or skinned alive or of having ears, noses, and limbs severed, suffered by the unfortunate pioneers who were captured by tribal war parties dominated the conversations within the settlements. To make matters worse, with the Revolutionary War raging at an all-hands-on-deck degree all along the eastern seaboard, no militias could be roused to help defend the western frontier against the stealthy sorties of the native warriors.
Indeed, many pioneers, including Hancock Lee, who served in one of the nine companies of troops of the 13th Virginia Regiment, returned to the eastern colonies to fight the British, a move that further