/*?r^ F THE HISTOKY OF EXPLORATIONS IN THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, STEPHEN J). PEET. I Qass. Book THE HISTORY OF EXPLORATIONS MISSISSIPPI VALLEY. BY STEPHEN D.'PEET. FROM I'KOCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY, APRIL, 1896. WORCESTER, MASS., U. S. A. PRESS OF CHARLES HAMILTON, 3 11 Main S t ii k k t , 189G. THE HISTORY OF EXPLORATIONS IN THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY. There have been three kinds of explorations in the Mississippi Valley since the discovery, each of which has contributed to a diflerent department of science ; the first to geography, the second to ethnology, and the third to archfeology. It will take some time for us to give even the briefest review of these explorations, and yet they so join together and dovetail into one another that it seems to be important that they should all be considered together. We shall therefore follow the topical, rather than the chro- nological order, and shall consider the results which came from the early explorations to the different departments, giving a separate division to each. I. We begin with the explorations which were con- ducted in the interests of discovery. It will be noticed that these were conducted by different nationalities and covered different periods, the nationalities generally fol- lowing the belts of latitude in which the mother country was situated. Such was the case with the Spanish, French and English,^ 1 The early maps show the startling eflect of the discovery by Columbus upon all the nations of Europe, for voyages across the ocean were conducted by tiie different nationalities within the space of ten years; by the PZnglish under Sebastian Cabot in 1497; by the Portuguese under Ojeda in iriO'J; by the Spanish under Columbus and others in 1492; and by the French under Verra- zano as early as 150.!; but it still remains a question which one of the nationali- ties first reached the mainland and really discovered the continent. The fol- lowing maps will show the dates of the voyages of the different nationalities along the coast of America, the letters and figures in brackets indicating the pages in Winsor's " Cartier to Frontenac," on which they are found. " The King's Maj)." From a Portuguese Mappemonde, ir)0'2 [p. 7]. Ruysch, 1J08, entitled Terra Saucte Crucis Sive Muudus Novus [|). Sj. Sylvanus, loll though there were circumstances in the later explorations which ultimately brought the nations into conflict with one another. The English,^ who had made Jamestown Harbor the starting-point in the south and Port Royal on the north, extended their possessions westward and claimed the belt between these two points by right of discovery and purchase. The French, commencing on the St. Lawrence, traversed the chain of the Great Lakes, but moved in a southwest direction, crossing the track of the English at the junction of the Ohio with the Alleghany, and that of the Spanish at the junction of the Arkansas with the Mississippi ; finally reaching the Gulf of Mexico at the mouth of the Sabine River. The Spanish who began exploration in Florida and the Gulf States extended their conquests to the Northwest, and claimed at one time all the territory west of the Mississippi River. ^ [p. 11]. Portuguese Chart, 1520 [p. 15]. Verrazano, 1524 [p. 17]. Maiollo, 1527 [p. 19]. Micbael Lok, 1532 [p. 20] . Mercator, 1538 [p. 4!)]. The Cabot Mappemonde, 1544 [p. 44]. Ortelius, 1570 [p. G5J . Judaeis, 1593 [p. 67]. Quadus, ICOO [p. 68] . Hakluyt Martyr, 1587 [p. 72] . The Ottawa Route, 1642 [p. 87]. Hudson's Bay and the St. Lawrence, 1613 [p. 110]. Visscher, 1652 [p. 178.] Sanson, 1656 [p. 179]. Heylyn's Cosmography, 1656-62 [p. 180]. Blaeu, 1665 [p. 182]. Creuxius, 1660 [p. 184]. Ogilby, 1670 [p. 210]. Duvals, 1682 [p. 216] . This atlas served to keep up the notion that the Ottawa and not the Niagara conducted Ihe waters of Lake Erie to the sea. iThe English under the Cabots were seeking to rival the Spaniards in their discovery. They made their land-fall in 1497 in the neighborhood of New Foundland. They also discovered at the North a gulf supposed to correspond with the Mexican gulf at the South, and here found an expanse of water which bad already coursed another great continental valley, and by which it was practicable to go a long distance towards the interior. 2 It is supposed that Ojeda, the Portuguese, visited Venezuela and Brazil in 1492; and the navigator Cortereal reached the coast of New England in 1501, for there is a globe which represents the name Terra Corterealis above the St. Lawrence, and near it the date " Anno Christi, 1501." The Cantino map described by M. Ilarrisse shows that the Portuguese sailed the whole length of the Eastern coast of North America as early as 1502, for on it the coast of Greenland, New Foundland, Florida, and the West coast of Gulf of Mexico are well depicted. " On the King map," " Terra Laboratoris " and " Terra Cortereal" are close together, showing that the Portuguese reached this point as early as 1502. It is remarkable that nearly all the information which we have about the interior and the Indian tribes there, during the lirst two hundred years, is from the historians of different nationalities, and is contained in books printed in different languages. To illustrate, our history of the southern tribes, those between the Gulf coast and the Appalachian Mountains, is written in Spanish ; that of the tribes of the Middle States, — Powhatans, Cherokees, and Algonquins, — is contained in English books ; that of the northern tribes, — Hurons, Athapascans, Algonquins and Sioux, including the Dakotas, — in French books. The later history of the Iroquois and the tribes of the interior was written both by English and French, the Jesuit rela- tions containing the largest portion of the record. Still, there are cross-lights ; for while the volume by Cabega de Vaca and that by Garci lasso de la Vega, and the Portuguese Narrative are still relied upon as giving the best picture of the southern tribes, the writings of De Bry and the paintings of the artist Wyeth bring before us a picture of the tribes who are situated on the sea-coast of Florida and South Carolina. The maps of Verrazano, the Spaniard, bring before us a picture of the tribes on the coast of Maine. The writings of Champlain furnish a picture of the Iroquois. Taking the reports by different nationalities we have an excellent account of the early condition of the various tribes, and are interested very much in the descriptions of them. The picture moves before us like a panorama. As the different expeditions are taken into the interior one portion after another of our noble continent is l)rought to view, making us feel as enthusiastic and exhilarated by the vision as were the discoverers themselves, producing upon us the same impression that the reading of the letters did upon the minds of the Europeans at the time. Each part of the picture i)rings before us new scenes, new costumes and new surroundings, and new adventures. Wo listen and we catch even the sounds of new languages, and find that there are new grammatical constructions. We are indebted to the explorers and travellers who wrote descriptions which were so vivid and gave vocabula- ries which are so correct. We can bear with the exaof2:er- ations and deceptions of some of them, who wrote of voyages into regions which they never reached. If the " long river" of Lahontan has never been identified, and the voyage of Hennepin to the mouth of the Mississippi has proved to be a deception, the descriptions of Charlevoix, Marquette, Joliet and La Salle, and the various mission- aries are still resorted to for information about the Indians of the interior. There was to be sure a great difl^erence between the tribes, in moral character, grade of civilization, and modes of life; for those of the South were mild, peaceful, given to agricultural employments, sedentary in their habits, and somewhat advanced in their grade of civilization ; those of the Northern States were mainly hunters, who made their long voyages in canoes from the distant regions of the west, and sought to barter their furs for the conmiodities brought to them from Europe. Those of the far West were nomads, who followed the buffalo across the prairies, and the elk and moose to the mountains, changing the loca- tion of the villages according to the seasons. Those of the East, especially the Iroquois, which were then situated in the State of New York, were the most warlike of all the tribes. These were the worst foes which the Indians of the interior had at the time, and they filled all the tribes of the North with great terror. Their history is a tale of horrors from beginning to end. Our souls are stirred with indignation that human beings should be given to such unearthly and demoniac passions. But we are, at the same time, full of admiration at the fortitude and sublime faith of the missionaries who endured so much at their hands. 6 The story of the first century reads like a romance, for we follow the explorers through the Southern States and across the flowing rivers. But in the second the forests of the north are full of tragedy. It is like turning from Homer to ^Eschylus, from Chaucer to Shakespeare, from the days of Warren Hastings to the terrible tragedies under General Havelock, from the days of Admiral Coligny to the deeds of Robespierre. The cruelty of the savage Iroquois was greater, and the sufferings of their victims more intense, than had ever been recorded. These turn the history which began with peaceful conquests, interesting adventures and important discoveries, into a record of cruel slaughter, base treachery, and appalling torments. Treachery, however, was not confined to the hearts of the savages, for the ill-fated La Salle, after endur- ing all the discouragement and defeat which the deceit and treachery of his enemies could bring upon him, finally perished at the hands of his own followers, and his body was left to rot in a nameless grave amid the wild scenes on the Sabine River. His fleet was destroyed, his army scattered, and only the faithful friend, Tonty, with the iron hand, was left to tell the story of his tragic end. The result of these early explorations and voj'ages was, as we have said, to increase the knowledge of the geographical features of the continent, both in its contour and interior. A general acquaintance with the Indian tribes was also gained, and especially those situated along the sea-coast and near the rivers, for it was by voyaging, either in sail vessels or in canoes, that explorers, traders, and mission- aries made their distant expeditions. It would be inter- esting to follow up the routes taken by the different parties and quote the descriptions of the scenes through which they passed, for by these means we should realize what their first impressions were. It may be said, however, that the explorers who waded through the immense swamps, threaded the dense forests, and crossed many waste places, were not so much interested in the natural scenery as they were in escaping the danger which hirked everywhere. The forests were high and the rivers were large, and everything was new and strange, yet the adventurers had been through scenes that were grander and forests that were wilder than these. While there were large fields of maize from which provisions for the men and horses could be foraged, yet the villages were palisaded and were to be taken after much conflict and bloodshed. They were told that there was gold among the mountains, and they turned aside from their route to reach them. It was there that the queen of the forest came forth in her canopied canoe. After that there were many rivers to be crossed, and new means of crossing them must be devised. The most notable event was that the greatest river of all, the noble Mississippi, furnished a burial-place for their leader, the renowned De Soto, whose name is known to history but affixed to no important stream, or city, or province. Even in the later explora- tions, when the Northern regions were to be traversed, the scenery came before the voyagers by slow degrees. The great rivers were open to their vessels and the smaller rivers to their canoes ; but the cataract which is one of the wonders of the world at first escaped notice. It was known only by the reports which came from the savages. Though its roar was heard in the distance they did not turn aside from their path to visit it. The chain of the Great Lakes ^ 1 A map iu the Marine at Paris [1642] has the different nationalities as stretched aloni? the coast in the following order : "Cap Breton," " L'acadia," " Nouvelle Anj^le Terra," "Lan Ilollande," " Lan Suede," " La Virginie," La Floride." On this map are the St. Lawrence River, '* Lac Champlain," *' Lac Ontario," " Lac P]rie," " Lac des Hurons," " Lac Supeurieur," and two small lakes near " Lac Francois " and " Lac Louis " adjoining the mouth of the Ottawa River. It represents the Ottawa Route. This is one of the earliest maps that gives the chain of the Great Lakes or any approach to the Mississippi Valley. Sanson's map, 1656, represents the Northern part of the Mississippi Valley. In it the lakes are tolerably correct, but the Mississippi River and the Ohio are not laid down. A river flows North into Lac Des Puans or Green Bay. Heylyn's cosmography, 1656, represents the Mexican Gulf with several rivers flowing into it. But a single lake said to be three hundred miles long and a single river flowing into the St. Lawrence in place of the chain of Great Lakes. 8 stretched from the deep interior to the sea, connecting the head-waters of the Mississippi with the mouth of the St. Lawrence with a single chasm to brealc the chain, but it was link by link that it became known, and even then portions were supposed to be disconnected, the impression having been formed that the outlet was by the Ottawa River rather than by the Niagara, and that Lake Erie flowed north and west and not toward the Falls. Not until the time when the ill-fated La Salle launched his famous vessel, the Griffon, on the river above the Falls and began his long voyage to the land of firs and forests, did the full sense of the length and breadth of the inland seas come before his mind. Not until after suffering the great loss caused by the wreck of the famous vessel and the blasting of his hopes, did he begin to realize that its boundless shores could be a hiding-place for his enemies, and that their treachery could follow him to the remotest villages of the Indians. These waters which are so restless and majestic in their sweeping currents were not grander than the spirit of the great explorer who first traversed them. It requires a comprehensive view such as can be gained by the rapid passage in modern times to get a full sense of the majesty of these great Lakes and the wonders of the regions through which they flow. The work of tracing the routes which were followed and identifying the places where they stopped, remains for those who admire their exploits and cherish their memories. There were anticipations which nerved the first cxi)lorers. Rumors came to them that there were rivers which led to the South Seas, and it was a constant hope with the travellers that by some means they might cross the barriers of land and mountain and reach the fiirther India, which was the object of search with Columbus, the first discoverer. It took a long time for the mistaken notion that America was only a part of Asia to pass away.^ The fact that it was a continent by 1 A globe made by Fninciscus Monachiis, 1526, unmistakably represents N. 9 itself gradually dawned upon the mind, and then the valley became the most prominent part of the continent.^ There were, to be sure, rivers which were remote from the chosen routes, and large forests which were not visited by the explorers, and numerous villages of which nothing was known until nearly three hundred years after the dis- covery. We refer now to the forests along the Ohio River and the Cumberland Valley, which afterward proved to be so rich in al)original remains, showing that it was once tilled with a teeming population, and abounded with villages which were advanced in their type of architecture and art. The Ohio River flowed through this region, and yet, for nearly two hundred and fifty years very little was written concerning it or its resources ; in fact, the veil of obscurity is scarcely drawn until the time of the settlement under Boone, Harrod, and other hardy adventurers. We read about the conquests of Mexico and Peru under the Span- iards with great interest. We follow the route taken by Coronado in 1536 to the north of Mexico into New Mexico and Colorado, and learn about the fiimous cities of Cibola. America as part of Asia [See " Cartier to Frontenac " p. 22]. Mr. Winsor remarks that it is thought Ruysch used Columbus's drafts. These two maps show the ignorance as to the American coast, and perpetuate the error into which Columbus fell at the beginning, and which he never corrected in his life— that America was an extension of Asia. There is on Kuysch's map the island of Java, which is one of the East Indies ; but it is in the same ocean with the island of Hayti, which is one of the West Indies. The map of Maiollo, 1527, represents "Francesca" along the New England coast, " Tera Florida " on the Gulf of Mexico. "Terra Nova descoverta per Christofaro Colurabo" in the neighborhood of Venezuela, and "SpagnoUa" on the island of Hayti. The " Sea of Verrazauo " appears on all of the early maps from 1524 to 1582, including one by Verrazano, 1524, Maiollo, 1527, Michael Lok, 15S2, some- times called " Mare Indicum," and sometimes called " Mare de Verazana." It occupies the same place as the Mississippi Valley. 1 Ortelius's map, 1570, is one of the earliest to give the continent of America correctly. On this map the title, " America Sive India Nova," stretches across the northern part of the continent, and " Nova Francia" appears above the St. Lawrence, "B'lorida" in its proper place, "Hispania" across Mexico, '•Quivira" on the Northwest coast, "Chilaga" in the neighborhood of Lake Superior, but Peru and Hrazil in their proper place, "Caribana" on the northern coast of S. America. 10 We even pass over the mountains and enter the prairies of the far West, and get a glimpse of that mysterious region called Quivira. We pass up the Ottawa River with the Jesuit missionaries and reach the head-w-aters of Lake Superior, cross to the St. Croix River and visit St. Anthony's Falls. We go down the Mississippi River to its mouth and learn about the people situated on cither bank. But that region which had been drained by the beautiful Ohio and its branches, remained terra incognita. Even up to the time when Washington visited the head-waters of the river, and passed up to Presque Isle on the shores of Lake Erie, this was ever debatable ground, claimed by different tribes of Indians and yet coveted by the white men.^ We know next to nothing of the changes which took place or even of the trade which was conducted with the native population, and archaiologists are accord- ino-ly at a loss to explain certain things which have come to light in modern times, and which some think were pro- duced by the natives after they had had contact with the whites. The supposition is that there were Spanish miners in the mountains of North Carolina, as there were French miners on the south shore of Lake Superior. But it is difficult to distinguish between the metal relics which may have been manufactured by white men and traded to the Indians, from those which were of purely aboriginal origin. Copper relics have been exhumed from mounds in the very heart of the State of Ohio which seemed to bear the impress of the ^white man's touch ; but the diflSculty is to trace the history of these regions of the interior so as to know how early trading-stations were established, and how soon the Indians began to use the articles manufactured by the white man. The southern shore of Lake Eric was also lOnc reason for tlie i',Mionincc' of the Ohio Kivcr W!i8 that the orif,'inal inhab- itimtH liad been driven out by tlie Iroquois in the period wiiich ehipsed between the diseovery by Columbus and the exidoration by La Salle. The IrofjUoiM were friendly to tlie En^'lish and hostile to the Freneli, and so kept the Freueb e.\i>lorers from this region. 11 to remain little known for a long time. The terror of the Iroquois had made it an unattractive wilderness, and no one dared follow the footsteps of La Salle athwart the region. The French had constructed a stockade at Oui- tanon on the north bank of the Wabash, but had not dared to establish a single post east of the Maumee, for the Con- federates Avere still holdinsj the reo;ion between Lake Erie and the Ohio River, this region having been derelict since the time of the destruction of the Eries in 1G50. II. There are also Ethnological problems which are to be solved by the history of exploration in the Mississippi Valley. We have not time to mention all of the problems, but will only state that it was through these explorations that the location of the different tribes came to be known and their affinities were discovered. It appears that there were several great stocks scattered over the Missis- sippi Valley, dividing it into districts, which can now be easily traced by certain definite lines, thus making a lin- guistic map out of the very geographical territory which had been traversed. This map has been a varying one, for the tribes have changed their location with every successive period of American history. Still the tribes continued to cluster into the same groups, for the different stocks as they change their territory were massed together and were settled down in the great provinces, which became afterward States, the boundaries of these States having been formed long before the date of history. We go to the maps for our knowledge of all the changes which took place whether among the Indian tribes or among the European claimants. The maps are, to be sure, covered with names and v;ith inscriptions which reveal the struggles for possession among the different European nationalities, but they are also covered with Indian names which reveal to us the location of Indian tribes and villages. They do not seem like maps of America, but rather like the maps of some foreign country ; for they are printed in diflerent 12 ' I Iciiiicpiirs map, 1(W;!. represents the lukcs with toliTiibk" correctness liut willi dilViiciit nitnies, viz. : Lake Frontenac, Lac Do Conty ou Eric, Lac IVOrleans oil Huron, Lac Danpiiin on Illinois, Lac de Condeon Sui)erienr ; the Mis>is>iiipi Kiver appears nnder the name of 1^ Colbert, and the Illinois under the name of Seigueiuu, but the Ohio River docs uotappcur and the lower Mississippi is a mere 13 languages, — English, Dutch, French and Spanish, — with the Indian names and the names of the rivers all spelt differ- ently. What is more, the territory of the Indian tribes varies according to the European nationality which made the map. The English, who claimed the Iroquois for their allies, extended the Iroquois territory from the mouth of the Mohawk on the Hudson River to the mouth of the Ohio, and even down the Mississippi as far as the Gulf of Mexico ;^ dotted line. This is one of the earliest maps to represent the Mississippi Valley, and evidently came from the explorations by La Salle. Still Joliet's larger map, 1674, contains the lakes, the upper part of the Mississippi River, the rive de Misconsing, riv de la Divine [Illinois] ; also a river supposed to be the Ohio, on which is the inscription : Biviere par ou descendit le Sieur de la Salle au sortir du lac Erie i^our aller dans le Mexique, Such are the maps which show the gradual acquaintance with the Mississippi Valley which resulted from the various explorations. 1 There is some reason to suppose from Sajason^s map that the Maumee had been explored as early as 1650.. In 1714, Crozat's agents found mines in south- eastern Missouri, and got their supplies from the Illinois country. De la Tour sent explorers four hundred miles up the Alabama above the Coosa and Talla- poosa, who established a fort called Fort Toulouse. Crozat's agents built a storehouse near Nashville, on a mound, where they traded with the Shawnees, A party left Kaskaskia in 1703 to explore the Missouri ; and in 1705 some miners built a fort on the Missouri above the Osage. Mitchell, the geographer, claimed that the Six Nations extended tbeir terri- tory to the river Illinois ever since 1672, and had incorporated the ancient Shawnees and the Chaouanons, besides which they exercised a right of conquest over the Illinois and the Mississippi as far as they extended. (Ibid., p. 237.) In Coxe's Carolina we have a description of the territory on either side of the Mississippi River from the mouth to St. Paul, with the resources of the country pretty clearly described, the object of the book being to encourage English trade with the tribes situated in the region. AVe tind a description of the region on the Cumberland River. But the Foxes, who had been overthrown at Detroit, were soon waylaying the French traders at the Green Bay portage. The Fox and Wisconsin Rivers had been well-nigh deserted, but the older portages by the Maumee and Wabash had come into use, and Vincennes was a recognized station. (Ibid., p. 118.) The portages south of the Chicago River, by way of the Kankakee and the Dcs Plaines, and by the St. Joseph River, were kept open. Charlevoix went by St. Joseph and Ivankakee to the south. The Miami confederacy, situated upon the Wabash, had put 3,000 warriors into the field as a check upon the Iroquois. {Ibid., p. 26.) The Jesuits were among the Illinois tribes as early as 1680, and the Carmel- ites and Capuchins among the tribes from Alabama to the Red River as far north as Natchez. Tlie Mississippi became the great highway of the church. Iberville had established a settlement at Natchez called Rosalie; but Bienville, his brother, led an expedition against two villages of the Natchez in 1723, and 14 and made maps with a legend written over the prairies of Illi- nois, " this was the place where the English hunted cows." The French, on the other hand, based their claims on the voyages of the French missionaries and the explorations of the French traders. And so they gave the French names to the same regions. ^/,et^G^.acva>^^ JoLiiyr's Mai> of tiik Mississum-i Kivhu. Fkom AVinsou's " Caktikk to Fkontexac." p. 245. One of the earliest maps wliich gives the Mississippi River entire is this by Joliet, 1(173. On this the laiies are all represented witli tolerable eorreetness as well as tiie rivers and the gulf eoast, but they bear Indian and French names mingled; the provinces having the Spanish, French, English, and Swedish names according to the nationality that settled them. The Ohio River docs not appear on this map, but does on the larger map by Joliet, i)ublished soon after. prepared the way for the fearful outbreak and the war of extermination whidi followed soon after. The French established a fort at tlie mouth of Fox River. {Ibid., \). Vil.) Jlitchell's map of the British colonies, 17")o, shows the route of Col. Welch to the Mississippi in 1G9S, since followed by our traders. The Chicasaws in alliance and subjection to the English. Chicasaw towns and English factories, the extent of the Knglish settlements, arc placed SoO miles west of Charleston, South Carolina. The trail crosses the head-waters of all the streams and strikes the following villages: Ockfuskee, Coussa, also Tapouchas. 15 The Indian names are applied to rivers, lakes, waterfalls, and natural scenery, some of which have been retained and are very euphonious and suggestive. Ontario, Huron, Michigan being the names of lakes; Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Kansas, Arkansas, being the names of rivers ; Omaha, Milwaukee, Kishwaukee, being Indian names applied to villages or cities. We notice here the difference in the names given by Euro- pean explorers, for the missionaries applied the names of their saints, while the traders gave only the names of their own heroes and leaders. In this way we have St. Paul, St. Louis, St. Marie, and St. Croix in different localities ; but in others we read the names of Duluth, La Salle, Marquette, and Nicolet. The English generally gave the names of their kings and queens to the colonies on the sea- coast, but allowed Indian names to be retained by the mountains and rivers of the interior. The names of States, later on, were taken from the tribes who were supposed to have occupied and possessed them from time immemorial. We are gaining in various ways a knowledge of the aboriginal trade^ during this period, and more especially by 1 There had been an intermittent trade carried on with them for three-quar- ters of a century. New Yorii was already pressing her claims over the remote regions beyond the forks of the Alleghanies. She held that the parliamentary acts of 1024 had made this region crown lands. The Delawares had begun to follow the game over the mountains, and the Pennsylvania pack-men were not far behind; though they encountered the Frenchmen on the Alleghanies. Charlevoix spent a month in Kaskaskiu, October and November, 1721. In passing down the river, he saw the vast meadows covered with herds of buffalo. He passed Fort Chartres (which was founded in 1720), and remarked how the increasing settlements between the Fort and Kaskaskia were beginning to look like a continuous village. The French built a fort at the mouth of the Arkansas to protect the line of communication between New Orleans and Kaskaskia. A crowd of palisaded cabins soon sprang up on the spot where Joutel, escaping from the assassins of La Salle, had come so happily upon some of Tonty's men. The Jesuits were among the tribes of the Illinois. The Iroquois were a bar- rier of defence between the English, in Maryland and Virginia, and the French, and had prevented them from making a descent that way. In 1701, the Lieut.- Qovernor of New York entered into a treaty with the Confederates at Albany, by which the region north of the Ohio and stretching to the Illinois River was 16 the study of the relics which are being exhumed from time to time. It is by this means, and by the study of journeys and trading-expeditions which are not prominent, that cer- tain tril)es who dwelt in the interior have become known. To illustrate : Relics have been discovered during the last year at Willoughby, Ohio, and have been placed in the Western Reserve Historical Society, at Cleveland, which help to solve the problem as to the Eries, who were blotted out by the Iroquois. These relics are composed of pipes, pottery, and bone needles, and resemble those which are found on the Iroquois territory. The portraits on the pipes resemble Iroquois faces. This proves that the Eries ^ belonged to the same stock as the Iroquois, and corres- ponds with the tradition that they were destroyed by that ceded to the English king. {See Winsor^s M. B., p. 67.) From this time on trading-posts were established in Ohio mainly by the English. Still it was in dispute until after the French and Indian war. There is a map contained in Winsor's " The Mississippi Basin," page 242, which gives the location of the trading-stations and Indian trails as well as forts. In this the names are ex- pressive. Names are as follows : Logstown near Fort Du (^uesnc. Three-legs on the Muskingum River, White-woman's on the Licking, French Margarets on the Hocking, Hurricane Toms on the Scioto, Junundat on the Sandusky, built in 1754. The Mascoutens and Kickapoos, in 172(5, i)ut a stop to the Green Bay portage. De Lignery succeeded in bringing the Foxes to a peace, and they agreed to spare as allies of the French, the Illinois. Father Guignas and Boucher de la Perriere built a stockade on Lake Pepin, and called it Fort I?eauharnois. It was the first settlement on the Mississipjii north of the Illinois. The Carolina traders had i)Ut up two booths on the Wabash, and rumors reached Kaskaskia that other stations had been established further up the Ohio. The English were haunting the upper waters of the Wabash and trading among tlie Miamis. M. Vincennes, who was among the Miamis, was prepared to repel the English if they approached. The country of Illinois was added to Louisiana in 1717. The waning power of the Iroquois, and the coming of the Delawares and the Shawnees into the Ohio Valley, had permitted the French to conduct more extensive explorations. {Ibid., p. 14S.) 1 As to the location of the lories the two maps given witli this paper are sug- gestive; namely, the map of Dr. Smith, 1720, and the map of Vander Aa, 1750. On both of these maps the Oniasontke or Nation du Chat are placed on the Ohio liiver, a little below Lake Erie, which was formerly called Lac de Y(-\\s or du Chat. FitoM Wixsou's " MississTPPi Basix.' Mai' i»y Dk. Jamks Smith, London, 1720. From AYinsor's " Mississippi Basin.' Showing Location of Indian Tribes. 20 cruel and aggressive people.^ We must go far back of the period when the Jesuit missionaries were among the Hurons, to find the time when the Hurons, Eries, and Iro- quois were at peace with one another and filled the entire region from the St. Lawrence to the St. Clair Rivers, and occupied both sides of the two great lakes, — Lake Ontario and Lake Erie. At that time the Algonquins were divided into four parts. Those in New England on the east, the Delawares and Powhatans on the south, the Miamis and Illinois on the west, the Ojibways and Athapascans on the " Dr. James Smith's map 1720, gives the natural features correctly ; the lakes, the rivers, the gulf coast, and the sea coast. It also gives the Indian tribes as they were located at tliis time." The Oniasontkc or Nation du Chat on tiie Ohio River; the " Tionontatecaga who inhabit in caves to defend themselves from the great heat," on the Tennessee, villages of the Chicachas, villages of the Shawnees [Chaouenons] and also of the Taogarias, villages of the Caskinampos [the CaskigheJ on the Cumberland; villages of the Chaouenons on the Santee River. The Cherokees [Chaiaque] and the Apalachians [Apalaehe] on the Apalache River villages of the Choctaws [Chactas] or Flat Head Indians; also village of Chicachas on the head waters of the Mobile; vilUiges of the Natchez, also of the Colapissas and the Taeusa, on the Lower Mississippi; village of Tamoroa and of the Illinois and Kahokia near the mouth of the Missouri River; the Kicapou on the Illinois River, the Mascoutcns on the Rock River, the Miamis on Miami River, the Usages on Osage River and an inscrip- tion on the Illinois as follows: "The Matigamea formerly lived here." Another inscription on the Tennessee River, is as follows : " The road the French take to go to Carolina." This map and the following one indicate the state of the country the location of the Indian villages at the time of the first permanent settlement of the Mississippi Valley. 1 The map based on d'Anville, published by Vander Aa, IToS, contains the long river of l^a Hontan, near It a river supposed to flow to the "West Sea. It also gives the five Great Lakes under their present names; the Ohio River under the name Oubache; the Mississippi and Missouri and Illinois under their present names. It represents the location of the Indian tribes as they were at this time. The Oltawas [or Outaouacs] on both sides of Lake Superior. The Sioux at the head waters of the Mississippi. The Foxes, or Nation des Ren- ards, on the Wisconsin River; The Nation du Feu, or Kickapoos, west of Lake Michigan; The Miamis, south of the lake; The Illinois on the Illinois River; villages of the Michigamias [Matisgamea] below the Illinois. Village Des Sauteurs near Saut St. Marie, the Mississague above Lake Huron, the Nation Du Chat, south of Lake Krie, the Andastogues on the Alleghany River, and a tribe called Les Oniasontkc on the upper Ohio River, and the Iroquois Just below the Lake Ontario. There are two forts on the map; fort de Sasqua- hanong on the Susquehanna Uiver and fort St. Louis called fort Crevc Occur on the Illinois River. 21 north. The great Dakota tribe, called the Sioux, were situated to the west of the Mississippi River and occupied the States which have since borne their name ; the lowas being but a tribe of the Dakotas, and the Missouris, Kaws, or Kansas, constituting a branch of the same stock. The exploration of this entire region revealed the loca- tion of the various tribes or families of Indians which were the first possessors of the soil, but this is a chapter of our history of which we know but little. The names of the Indian tribes have fortunately been given to the States which have been hewn out of the Northwest Territory ; Algonquin names having been affixed to the States east of the Mississippi, the Dakota names to those west of the Mississippi, and the names of other tribes to those that were farther west and south. There were great changes among them before the time of the discovery and the settlement by the whites. There was, however, one tribe which was constantly on the move, — the tickle wanderers called Shawnees. The evi- dence is that they were Algonquins, and at an early date they passed down from the north through Illinois into Kentucky and Tennessee, and across the Cumberland Moun- tains to the coast of Florida and South Carolina, where they came in contact with tribes of the Dakotas and of the Iroquois who had branched off from the parent stock during the time of the prehistoric migrations, and finally reached their stopping-place in the southeast corner of the moun- tain region. The Shawnees turned this corner, and began wandering north until they reached the Delawares on the Delaware River. Joining with them they turned back toward their old seats, and are found again in the opening of history on the Ohio River. The Shawnees have left their names on certain rivers and trading-posts in Ohio, Kentucky, Illinois, South Carolina, and even in Wisconsin. But they have made great havoc with the records of other tribes, and have brought terrible confusion into the archai- 22 ology of the entire region. Their wanderings cover a period of two hundred 3'ears, the most of them after the date of discovery. And yet, so little is known of them, that it is almost impossible to say to a certainty what relics were left and what mounds, if any, were built by them. The stone graves near Nashville and the stone graves found in the Etowah mound, also stone graves in Ohio and Illinois, have been ascribed to them ; but the relics found in these different States are as different as those which belong to difierent nationalities, and so the archaeological record is very confused. The same uncertainty exists in reference to the ('hcrokees.^ They are supposed to be the Allighewis of tradition. The story is, that the Iroquois and the Dela wares migrated late in the prehistoric period from the north or from the west. They crossed a great river, and finally united in the effort to expel the Allighewis, who dwelt in fortified cities or towns and were permanently established. After long contests they drove them from their seats, and took possession of their territory. This is the record which has gone into history. It is not tradition merely, but it is history. The explorers have not been able to identify exactly the river that was crossed, nor tell where the contest occurred, or even decide where the walled towns were situated, though the supposition is that southern Ohio is the place where they dwelt. It is on this supposition that Dr. Thomas has based his theory that they 1 There were chaunglish factories were established at an early date among the Southern tribes, such as the Chicasaws, Choctaws and Creeks, as may be seen by the study of the maps above. The history of the Dutch trade with the Indians is not so well known. " The Algon<|uin stock, commencing with John Cabot, were taught in tlu' industrial arts by French, Dutch, Swedes, and English Puritans, (Quakers and loyalists, who contributed to their outfits iron arrow-heads, knives, saws, files, drills, fish-hooks, and guns, and having cajoled them out of the knack of their native arts put them into close intimacy with the blacksmith, gunsmith and the wood- worker."— [I''rom The Amf'.rlcan Anl/iropdlotjist. The Scandinavian trade began under the Norst^man in 900 with the tribes in New England, and no doubt modified the arts of tlie AboriL'ines; thus intro- ducing the Iron Age into America nearly 1,000 years ag