On
August 8, 1838, readers of the Indiana Democrat in
Indianapolis were greeted by a special correspondence from the northern Indiana
community of Logansport, which had been originally printed in the Logansport
Telegraph.
The
article, signed “A Visiter to the Lake,” reported on the sighting of a
sixty-foot-long creature sliding through the once quiet waters of Lake Manitou,
located near Rochester in what is now Fulton County. One eyewitness, who viewed
the monster from the safety of the shoreline, described the beast’s head as
“being about three feet across the frontal bone . . . but the neck tapering,
and having the character of the serpent; color dingy, with large bright yellow
spots.”
The man responsible for the Telegraph’s publication of this unlikely story was a person who, in all other respects, seemed to be the least likely to come up with such a whopper of a tale—John Brown Dillon, who became known as the “Father of Indiana History” for his much respected History of Indiana, which went through four editions between 1843 and 1859, and helped save future the state’s past for future generations through his work with a number of early Hoosier historical organizations. His writings won praise from Indiana historians who came after him, with one, Emma Lou Thornbrough, commending Dillon for being the “only person in the state in this period whose writings deserved to be called history by modern standards of historical scholarship.”
Dillon had help in his “Devil’s Lake” escapade, as noted pioneer Hoosier artist George Winter contributed several of the articles about the monster printed in the Telegraph and an illustration featuring a method of possibly capturing the creature.
Sometime in his life Dillon had suffered a visual malformity, and always could be seen wearing dark-green eyeglasses equipped with side mirrors. His friend, Logansport attorney and later Indiana supreme court judge Horace P. Biddle, recalled that “familiar as we were for so many years, meeting at all hours of the day, under all circumstances—even to bathing in the river—I never saw his face without his glasses on, which he always wore fastened by a little cord around the back of his head.” After Dillon’s death, when his body was being prepared for burial, Biddle investigated and discovered that his friend’s “left eye had been broken, apparently by a blow of some kind, and partially wasted away.”
By
1834 Dillon had settled in Logansport, where he studied law and was admitted to
the Cass County bar in 1840. He never, however, established a law practice,
preferring instead, noted Biddle, to spend his time on “hoary border legends,
traditional story, but more especially local history.” Dillon pursued these
interests through a career in pioneer journalism, starting work as an editor
for the Logansport Canal Telegraph in August 1834. A year
later he purchased an interest in the newspaper, which, by 1836, had changed
its name to the Logansport Telegraph.
Described
by his friends as shy, serious, and intellectual in nature, Dillon exhibited
another side to his character in an incident during his time as the Telegraph’s editor. Biddle recalled that
he, Dillon, and Winter were in his law office on April 1, 1840, when someone
mentioned that it was April Fool’s Day. Dillion was keen on the idea of fooling
somebody and wrote out a notice and tacked it on a billboard in the office of
the hotel where he lived. The notice read: “There will be exhibited at the
court house this evening a living manthorp, from 8 to 10 o’clock. Sir Roger De
Coverly, Manager.”
Dillion’s
notice had an immediate effect. At dinner that night, Biddle recalled,
clergymen, lawyers, and other learned men of the community were searching every
book they could find to learn what a manthorp was. “The word manthorp is really
a compound of two Anglo-Saxon words,” Biddle noted, “meaning ‘the man of the
village.’ For a long time afterwards Mr. Dillon’s ‘April Fool’ was locally a
popular anecdote.”
If
the Lake Manitou monster is but a legend, then the “living manthrop” was not
Dillon’s first practical joke on the citizens of Logansport. The bespectacled
editor, however, did not herald the monster’s existence by himself. He had the
assistance of the English-born Winter, who came to Logansport from Indianapolis
in May 1837, as he later wrote, “for the purpose . . . of seeing and learning
something of the Indians and exercising the pencil in that direction.” Winter
obviously had learned something of the Indians’ “Devil’s Lake” legend—knowledge
he used for his articles in Dillon’s Telegraph.
Later in life, Winter confirmed his authorship of some of the newspaper articles about the monster and expressed his surprise at the reception they had received. In a December 16, 1871, letter to B. J. Lossing, Winter wrote: “I felt a deep interest in this inland lake as I had gathered up the facts in relation to the Indian story associated with it. . . . From the peculiarity of the tradition and from its emanating from a ‘Wild Region’ of [the] country, it won the attention of the press and went ‘the rounds’ unexpectedly to my anticipation or aspirations.”
It
is truly astonishing that such a small inland lake, so remote too from the
seas, should be as mysterious in its depths as it is in its legendary
associations. But so it is. Boys! Up with your harpoons and to the Lake
Man-i-too. The weather, the season, the forest in all its leafy beauties offer
you inducements to leave the turmoil of every day life for a week, and seek
relaxation in the exciting expedition to the Devil’s Lake.”
Although
a meeting was organized on August 11, 1838, at the Eel River and Cass County
Seminary to discuss methods of capturing the monster, no expedition to the lake
was ever mounted by Logansport residents. According to a local historian, a
“sickly season, combined with other circumstances,” prevented the investigation
from happening. The creature remained safe and hidden.
Articles
on the monster inhabiting Lake Manitou died out from the Telegraph’s pages by September 1838. Interest in the creature was
resurrected, however, in 1849 when Winter wrote an article for the Logansport Journal on “The Monster Caught
at Last.” The story reported the capture of a fish weighing “several hundred
weight—the head alone weighs upward of 30 pounds and its capacity for
swallowing may be imagined when we state the mouth measures three feet in
circumference.” Also, in 1888, according to a history of Fulton County, a
116-pound spoonbill catfish was pulled from the lake by four men, who placed
the fish in a horse trough by the courthouse in Rochester and charged people
ten cents for a peek at the great beast. They later took their catch exhibit in
Logansport. Eventually, they butchered the catfish and sold it at ten cents per
pound.
Dillon’s
work as a historian soon usurped his journalism career. He started his research
on a history of Indiana in 1838, receiving assistance from U.S. Senator John
Tipton, a close friend. Dillon left Logansport in 1842, moving to Indianapolis
to pursue his historical studies and find funding for his history. Although he
could rely on materials from the state library and private collections, Dillon
lamented that “many interesting facts, connected with the early settlement of
Indiana, have been perverted, or lost forever, because they were never
recorded, and the stream of tradition seldom bears to the present, faithfully,
the history of the past.” Still, his Historical Notes on the Discovery
and Settlement of the Territory Northwest of the Ohio, appeared in 1843,
and was followed sixteen years later by his History of Indiana. His
posthumously published Oddities of Colonial Legislation in America came
out in 1879.
Fellow
Hoosier historian George S. Cottman, founder of the Indiana Magazine of
History, dubbed Dillon as the “Father of Indiana History” and praised him
as the first in the state to enter the field “with any seriousness of purpose,
and his contributions exceed in value any that have come after.” In his writing
Dillon displayed “immense industry, unflagging perseverance and an ever-present
purpose to find and state the truth,” said Cottman.
Dillon
himself wrote that in his work he was striving to give an “impartial” recording
of history. He noted in his preface to his History of Indiana that
in writing the book he attempted to keep his mind free from such influences as
“ambitious contentions between distinguished men, or from false traditions, or
from national partialities and antipathies, or from excited conflicts between
the partisans of antagonistic political systems, or from dissensions among
uncharitable teachers of different creeds of religion.”
In
1845 the state legislature elected Dillon as state librarian, a post he held
until 1851, when a Democratic legislature replaced him with Nathaniel Bolton.
Dillon later served as, assistant secretary of state, secretary to the State
Board of Agriculture and held numerous offices with the Indiana Historical
Society, including secretary and librarian. He proved indefatigable at adding
books and manuscripts to the Society’s early collection. In addition to state
offices, Dillon served on a variety of Indianapolis governmental bodies,
including being a member of the Marion County Library Board and a school
trustee.
In
1862 Dillon left Indianapolis for Washington, D.C., where he received a position
as clerk to the Department of the Interior, later moving to a job as clerk with
the House Military Affairs Committee. Civic leaders in Indianapolis remembered
Dillon’s contributions to the state, with noted attorney Calvin Fletcher
calling upon the state legislature to bring the historian back to Indiana to
write a history of the state’s contribution to the Civil War. Dillon finally
returned to Indianapolis in 1875, living in a room at Johnson’s Building on
Washington Street. He struggled to make a living, even having to sell his
beloved library to make ends meet. Dillon died on January 27, 1879, and was
buried at Crown Hill Cemetery.
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