Authors: William Souder
111
  Â
And a different version
Herrick,
Audubon the Naturalist
, vol. I, pages 224â25.
112
  Â
Wilson made drawings
Wilson to Alexander Lawson, May 18, 1810. In Hunter,
The Life and Letters of Alexander Wilson
, pages 358â70.
112
  Â
Wilson had wounded
Wilson to Alexander Lawson, April 4, 1810. Ibid., pages 326â39.
112
  Â
Wilson actually met a man
Wilson to Alexander Lawson, April 28, 1810. Ibid. A number of Wilson's very long and richly detailed letters from the frontierâsuch as this one of several thousand wordsâwere published in Philadelphia in the journal
The Port Folio
, which had been recently purchased by Samuel Bradford.
112
  Â
In western Tennessee
Wilson to Alexander Lawson, May 18, 1810. Ibid.
112
  Â
At the end of April
Ibid.
113
  Â
I was advised by many
Ibid.
113
  Â
Eleven miles from Nashville
Ibid.
114
  Â
He later gave a full account
Ibid.
114
  Â
In the summer of 1811
Hunter,
The Life and Letters of Alexander Wilson
, page 105. Ord apparently got in touch with Wilson after reading Wilson's plea for information about birds from “gentlemen of leisure” who were interested in natural history, which he published in the Preface to the third volume of
American Ornithology
. Given the outlines of their lives, their seemingly instantaneous partnership,
the intensity with which Ord continued Wilson's work long after Wilson's death, and Ord's ferocious attacks on Audubon, it is not unreasonable to wonder about the extent of the intimacy between Ord and Wilson. Wilson's intermittent, frustrating connections with women don't tell us much, apart from the fact that he was unlucky in love. So was Ord, who was twice married. His first wife died and his second was confined to a mental hospital for most of her adult life. Ord had two children, a daughter who died in infancy and a son who became an artist. Ord apparently lived as a bachelor.
114
  Â
Two years later, Ord got
“Minutes of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia,” June 19, 1813. Although Wilson and his work are both intimately linked with the formative years of the academy, his election to membership came only two months before his death.
114
  Â
Say, a founder of the academy
Stroud,
Thomas Say
, page 40.
115
  Â
In the end, he colored most
Hunter,
The Life and Letters of Alexander Wilson
, pages 110â11.
115
  Â
The original run of two hundred copies
Cantwell,
Alexander Wilson
, page 234. The main problem with subscriptions was that Wilson, already overwhelmed with work on the engravings, could not find time to make collection trips. In the summer of 1812, just a year before he died, Wilson wrote to Sarah Millerâthe sister of his friend Danielâthat Bradford was demanding payment and that if he could not make a trip soon to collect money he was owed, he faced “absolute ruin.” The confiding tone of this letter is evidence, according to Clark Hunter in
The Life and Times of Alexander Wilson
, that Wilson and Miller were in the early stages of a romance destined never to bloom.
115
  Â
Many of his early subscribers
Ibid., page 277.
115
  Â
Volumes five and six
Ibid., page 254.
115
  Â
Wilson had by then
Hunter,
The Life and Letters of Alexander Wilson
, pages 104â5.
115
  Â
The seventh volume was finished
Ibid., pages 112â13.
115
  Â
He was now owed by his subscribers
Cantwell,
Alexander Wilson
, pages 238, 253â54.
115
  Â
His physical condition
Hunter,
The Life and Letters of Alexander Wilson
, page 113.
115
  Â
George Ord, who'd been away
A copy of Wilson's will is in the archives at the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia. The other coexecutor was Daniel Miller. Wilson left any and all other assets to Sarah Miller.
116
  Â
Wilson had crossed the Tennessee River
Wilson to Alexander Lawson, May 18, 1810. In Hunter,
The Life and Letters of Alexander Wilson
, pages 358â70.
9. AT THE RED BANKS
121
  Â
Ferdinand Rozier wanted to move
Herrick,
Audubon the Naturalist
, vol. I, page 236. Herrick says merely that the partners, discouraged by their failing business, decided to relocate. Alice Ford, perhaps closer to the truth in
John James Audubon
, speculates that Audubon, happily distracted by the woods and birds, barely realized the desperate situation at the store and only reluctantly agreed to the move.
121
  Â
Henderson's origins predated
Towles,
Henderson
, page 15.
121
  Â
In the years just before
Ibid., page 22.
121
  Â
Boone was one of the self-styled
Faragher,
Daniel Boone
, page 28. As the name implies, “long hunts” were extended shooting and trapping expeditions that lasted weeks and, often, many months at a time. Boone made his first long hunt in 1750, through the Blue Ridge Mountains along what later became the Virginia/North Carolina border, eventually making his way up to Philadelphia, where he sold pelts from the trip. In the winter of 1767â1768, Boone undertook his first hunting trip into Kentucky, where he was trapped in a blizzard but also killed his first buffalo. Faragher states that in 1769, perhaps already secretly employed by Richard Henderson, Boone departed on a hunting trip into Kentucky that lasted two yearsâduring which he was captured by, and escaped from, Shawnee Indians.
121
  Â
In the summer of 1774
Towles,
Henderson
, pages 21â22.
122
  Â
Daniel Boone and thirty men
Ibid., pages 22â23.
122
  Â
These mainly dealt with courts and militia
Ibid., page 23.
122
  Â
In September of 1775
Ibid., pages 23â24.
122
  Â
Two years later the Virginia House
Ibid., page 25.
122
  Â
In the spring of 1797
Ibid., page 26.
122
  Â
There was a loop in the Ohio
Ibid., page 17.
122
  Â
The bluff on the Kentucky side
Ibid. Spring floods of the Ohio were a nearly annual occurrence, and because these could be mighty inundations, Henderson's elevation was a significant asset. For a time, the Henderson city slogan was “On the Ohio, not in it.”
123
  Â
There were 264 lots
Ibid., pages 26â27.
123
  Â
A general store operated for a while
Ibid., page 30.
123
  Â
When Henderson's first saloon
Ibid.
123
  Â
Concern for law and order was considerable
Adams,
John James Audubon
, page 113.
123
  Â
Currency was hard to come by
Towles,
Henderson
, page 32.
123
  Â
The people spread throughout
Ibid., page 29.
123
  Â
By the time Audubon and Rozier visited
Ibid.
123
  Â
Even at that, Audubon
Audubon, “Fishing in the Ohio,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. III, pages 122â27.
124
  Â
Audubon, sidestepping the whole truth
Ibid.
124
  Â
The garden they planted
Ibid.
124
  Â
Lucy even had with her
DeLatte,
Lucy Audubon
, page 59.
124
  Â
Audubon and Rozier, meanwhile, invested
Towles,
Henderson
, page 31.
124
  Â
Pope was a dubious asset
Audubon, “Fishing in the Ohio,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. III, pages 122â27.
124
  Â
Not long after they got to Henderson
Ford,
John James Audubon
, page 77.
124
  Â
Her father, Captain James Speed
Ibid.
124
  Â
Though it was no grand estate
John James Audubon State Park Museum, Henderson, Kentucky. The museum's photograph of Meadow Brook shows that it was a dark and rather loose-looking frame houseâthough by frontier standards it must have seemed luxurious. It was symmetrical, with stone chimneys on either end. Originally, the central entrance was an open hallway that bisected the first floor from one side to the other, so that you could see daylight clear through. The passage was large enough to admit a horse, and this style of home was locally known
as a “dog trot.” The Rankins eventually closed up the entrance and fitted it with a standard door and entryway.
124
  Â
Elizabeth, who was impressed
DeLatte,
Lucy Audubon
, pages 60â61.
125
  Â
He wanted to move still farther
Ibid., page 60.
125
  Â
Audubon didn't feel a similar impulse
Ford,
John James Audubon
, page 77.
125
  Â
In early December of 1810
Ibid., pages 77â78.
125
  Â
They went in a keelboat
Ibid., page 78.
125
  Â
The travelers were repeatedly delayed
Ibid., pages 78â79.
125
  Â
Audubon conceded later
Audubon, “Breaking Up of the Ice,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. III, pages 408â10.
125
  Â
His bird drawings entertained them
Buchanan (ed.),
The Life and Adventures of John James Audubon
, page 30.
126
  Â
Audubon was fascinated by
Audubon, “Breaking Up of the Ice,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. III, pages 408â10.
126
  Â
Audubon accepted some cash
Herrick,
Audubon the Naturalist
, vol. I, page 242.
126
  Â
When he arrived back at Meadow Brook
Ford,
John James Audubon
, page 81.
126
  Â
St. Genevieve had more than
Cramer,
The Navigator
, pages 170â71.
126
  Â
Ferdinand Rozier stayed there
Herrick,
Audubon the Naturalist
, pages 245â46.
126
  Â
But he claimed that the only
Audubon, “The Prairie,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. I, pages 81â84.
126
  Â
He was alone, taking his time
Ibid. The record of Audubon's travels between St. Genevieve and Henderson is muddled, and the events that inspired this account could have occurred on a different trip. Since the entire episode is of dubious authenticity, it is doubly hard to say exactly when any of this might have taken place.
128
  Â
He located new space in town
Delatte,
Lucy Audubon
, pages 62â63.
128
  Â
The Audubons were invited to stay
Ibid.
129
  Â
Sometimes they would swim across the Ohio
Ford,
John James Audubon
, page 82.
129
  Â
Audubon bought the once-wild mustang
Audubon, “A Wild Horse,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. III, pages 270â74.
129
  Â
Audubon rode him to Philadelphia
Ibid.
129
  Â
She asked Audubon to take her east
DeLatte,
Lucy Audubon
, page 63.
129
  Â
Audubon rigged a seat
Lucy to Euphemia Gifford, January 5, 1812 (Princeton University Library).