Batts and Fallam expedition On September 1, 1671, Thomas Batts (Thomas Batte), Thomas Wood, and Robert Fallam (Robert Hallom) set out from Appomattox Town (located near present-day Petersburg, Virginia), "accompanied with
Peracuta, a great man of the Apomatock Indians, and Jack Nesan, formerly servant to
Ma.-Gen. Wood, with five horses." They were acting under a commission granted to Abraham Wood and authorized by the Virginia
House of Burgesses "for finding out the ebbing and flowing of the water behind the mountains, in order to the discovery of the South Sea" The Batts and Fallam group is credited with discovering Woods River, now called the
New River. Thomas Wood died during the expedition. The Batts-Fallam Journal records that on September 17, 1671, "the Indians being impatient of longer stay, they proclaimed
King Chas. the Second, and marked four trees, the first, C. R., for his Majesty, the second, W. B.
William Berkeley, for the Governor, the third, A. W., for Maj.-Gen. Abraham Wood, and the last, T. B., R. F., for themselves, and P. for Peracuta, who said he would be an Englishman, and on another tree are letters for the rest".
The History and Present State of Virginia, in Four Parts The History and Present State of Virginia, in Four Parts published in 1705 and written by
Robert Beverly (coincidentally, son-in-law of William Byrd I, stated elsewhere herein) states that William Berkeley "was also resolv'd to make new Discoveries abroad amongst the Indians" and "For this End he employ'd a small Company of about Fourteen English, and as many Indians, under the Command of Captain Henry Batt, to go upon such an Adventure." and "they set out together from Appamattox". He states that the "Indians which Capt. Batt had with him, made a Halt, and would positively proceed no further. They said, that not far off from that Place, lived a Nation of Indians, that made Salt, and sold it to their Neighbours. That this was a great and powerful People, which never suffer'd any Strangers to return, that had once discover'd their Towns. Capt. Batt used all the Arguments he could to get them forward, but in vain. And so, to please those timorous Indians, the Hopes of this Discovery were frustrated, and the Detachment was forced to return." The publication references Capt. Batt numerous times, but only refers to Captain Henry Batt once. It is not known if the reference to Henry Batt was a misprint or a reference to an expedition other than the Thomas Batts and Robert Fallom expedition.
French and Indian War In 1763, in negotiations following the French and Indian War, the Batts and Fallam exploration was used in treaty negotiations to bolster England’s claim to the Ohio Valley. James Needham was killed by his Indian guide early in the expedition. Arthur Gabriel went on to explore lands as far south as the western coast of Florida on the
Gulf of Mexico. On the return trip he traveled west to the Mississippi River, went upriver to the Ohio, and up the Ohio to the mouth of Big Sandy River in Kentucky. He visited numerous Shawnee villages along the lower Ohio River, and is credited with being the first whiteman to visit Kentucky, and may have been the first person to navigate the Ohio River. He returned to Fort Henry on June 18, 1674. == Notes ==