I hate to call her “The Unfortunate
Rachel”, but she was. Her troubles started in the fall of 1779 when
her father John Donelson, dragged his family along with about 600
men, women and children through the 12 mile long Cumberland Gap to an
outpost on the headwaters of the Tennessee River. From here most of
the younger men set out cross country, aiming for the Cumberland
River. Once there, they bought land from the local Shawnee Indians at
the head of a trail called the Natchez Trace. By winter they were
warm and snug in their new fort, which they called Nashboro (sic).
Unfortunately, on December 22 of that same year, John loaded 12 year
old Rachel, her ten siblings and her mother, along with 300 other old
men, women and children onto 30 flatboats and canoes, and began
floating down the Tennessee River. John Donelson thought the women
and children would have an easier time on the water. Boy, was he
wrong.
Almost immediately 28 people contracted
small pox and had to be isolated in a single boat. Then Indians
attacked, killing all the small pox victims. What was left of the
expedition repeatedly ran aground, some of the boats capsized, and
the women were required to help steer the ungainly rafts, while
Indians kept shooting the helmsmen. Eventually, the desperate band
reached the Ohio River, at Paduca, Kentucky. They then laboriously
poled ten miles against the current to the mouth of the Cumberland
River, and then 160 miles up that stream until their joyful reunion
on April 24, 1780, with their men at the new fort, now called
Nashville. Of the roughly 300 women and children who began that four
month 1,500 mile river voyage, 33 had died and nine arrived wounded –
that was a better than 10% causality rate They were literally
decimated. It was a tough trip.
Eventually the families each
established their own little fortresses in the wilderness. Unfortunately, five years
later, on March 1, 1785, the 18 year old Rachel Donelson married a 28
year old land speculator named Captain Lewis Robards. It was to prove
a tough marriage. He owned land 150 miles to the northeast, around
Harrodsburg, Kentucky, and the couple lived there with his widowed
mother, Elizabeth, who took in boarders. Then, in the fall of 1788,
Lewis returned home from a business trip to find Rachel on the porch
talking with a boarder, a traveling lawyer named Peyton Short.
According to another boarder, Judge John Overton, Lewis accused Short
of flirting with his wife, and a heated argument developed. Elizabeth
Robards was drawn outside where she took Mr. Short's side. Lewis then
accused his wife of encouraging Short. When his mother supported
Rachel, Lewis ordered his wife to leave and never show her face in
“his” house again.
So the unfortunate Rachel returned to
Nashville, where she met another young lawyer recently arrived at her
own widowed mother's boarding house. His name was Andrew Jackson. The
next year, Lewis arrived to patch up things with Rachel, but quickly
decided Andrew Jackson was now flirting with his wife. And maybe he
was. Anyway, Lewis outweighed Jackson by about 50 pounds, and
threatened to beat him up. Instead Jackson offered to meet him “on
the field of honor”, but then moved to a nearby trading post.
However Lewis's behavior, and his new threat to “haunt” Rachel,
convinced her that unfortunately Lewis was still crazy. And as soon
as Lewis had returned to Harrodsburg for a quick business trip,
Rachel took a boat up the Cumberland, then down the Ohio to the
Mississippi River. She didn't stop until she got to Natchez..
The following year, an announcement
appeared in a Kentucky newspaper saying that through the good offices
of his brother-in-law Major John Jouett, Lewis Robards had been
granted a divorce by the Kentucky Legislature. Reading this Jackson
immediately took off for Natchez, where in the summer of 1791, he and
Rachel were married. Unfortunately, they did not live happily ever after. Because Rachel was unfortunate
- remember? Even her divorce was going to be tough.
It was not until 1793 that the
Jackson's, living as man and wife on land Jackson had purchased ten
miles outside of Nashville, learned the newspaper story had been
incorrect. Kentucky had not granted Lewis Robards a divorce from
Rachel. All that Lewis' brother-in-law had got him was a bill
authorized him to seek a divorce in court. He had quickly started
that process, but legally, he and Rachel were still married, making
Rachel a bigamist. But then so was Lewis Robards, since in December
of 1792 he had married Miss Hannah Winn. The Robards-Donaldson nuptials
would not be legally ended until a year later – as of September 27,
1793.
Now, Rachel (above) was a devout Presbyterian,
and would never have lived with a man without believing she was in a
sanctified marriage. After all, marriage was usually the only
financial security a woman had in 18th century America.
And as soon as the Jacksons could verify the divorce, they remarried,
in January of 1794, in Nashville. After that, they settled down to
live happily ever after - not. Because Rachel's unfortunate divorce
was going to be very, very tough, especially on Andrew.
It is figured that Andrew Jackson
fought at least 13 duels to “defend his wife's honor”. It wasn't
that people did not understand the confusion distance and shoddy
records could generate along the frontier. But it was common
knowledge that if you were ticked off with the hot headed Jackson,
just mentioning Rachel would instantly get his goat. In 1806
Tennessee Governor John Sevier and head of the state militia Andrew
Jackson got into an argument in front of the courthouse in Knoxville.
Jackson began to list his extensive record of service, and when
Sevier got feed up he interjected, “I know of no great service you
have rendered, except taking a trip with another man's wife.”
The duel with Governor Sevier ended
with both men shooting into the air. But there was also the 1806 duel
with Charles Dickinson, which started as an argument over a horse
race, but came to a head when Dickinson called Rachel a bigamist.
Dickinson was a well known duelist, a crack shot, who proceeded to
lodge a musket ball in Jackson's lung. But Jackson's single minded
fury kept him on his feet, and he put a bullet in Dickerson’s
chest, killing him. Which is why Charles Hammond decided to bring up
the tardy divorce as well.
Charles Hammond (above) had been a Virginia
lawyer, who had even argued before the Supreme Court - where he earned
Chief Justice John Marshall's praise for his losing arguments. In
1826 Charles moved to Cincinnati, Ohio and bought the failing Gazette
weekly newspaper. He immediately turned it into a successful daily.
Daniel Webster called him “the greatest genius who ever wielded the
political pen” for his editorials. And in March of that year,
Hammond produced a classic editorial about Presidential candidate
Andrew Jackson, asking, “Ought a convicted adulteress and her
paramour husband be placed in the highest offices of this free and
Christian land?”
On March 23, 1827, Hammond returned to
the subject, informing the 15,000 residence of Cincinnati that “In
the summer of 1790, General Jackson prevailed upon the wife of Lewis
Robards of Mercer County Kentucky, to desert her husband and live
with himself in the character of a wife.” It wasn't true, at least
not entirely. After all, Lewis had ordered the unfortunate Rachel out
of his house, before she even met Jackson. In fact they never would
have met, except Lewis was behaving like a jerk. But then the
purpose of Hammond's insults was not to prove that Rachel had no
honor, but to prove that Jackson had no sense - that he was a hot
head, not to be trusted with the nation.
Jackson (above) did challenge Hammond to
a duel after the first insult, but Hammond refused to even respond.
And then Jackson was told that Hammond had met that summer with Henry
Clay, of “the corrupt bargain” fame, and that it was Clay who had
encouraged Hammond to write about Rachel. So Jackson challenged Clay,
who answered by insisting he had never mentioned Rachel to Hammond.
But Old Hickory decided he didn't believe Clay. From that day
forward Jackson was “determined to...lay the perfidy, meanness and
wickedness of Clay, naked before the American people...he is
certainly the basest, meanest scoundrel that ever disgraced the image
of God...nothing is too low for him to condescend to.”
In public Jackson remained calm, so
Hammond decided to step up the attacks. He wouldn't fight to defend
his wife's honor, then maybe he would reveal his real self to defend
his mother. Wrote Hammond now, “General Jackson’s mother was a
“COMMON PROSTITUTE” brought to this country by the British
soldiers! She afterward married a MULATTO MAN, with whom she had
several children, of which number General JACKSON IS ONE!!!”
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