209 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
209 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
Newsgroups: freenet.shrine.songs
|
||
From: aa300 (Jerry Murphy)
|
||
Subject: History of Ohio Natives
|
||
Date: Wed, 24 Jan 90 15:34:46 EST
|
||
|
||
|
||
NATIVE AMERICANS OF THE OHIO VALLEY
|
||
|
||
Traditionally, our studies of the history of an area go back only to that point
|
||
in time when it was settled by the immigrants who came over from Europe, or the
|
||
movement inland by their descendants.
|
||
|
||
A large part of this is due to the lack of a written language by the former
|
||
owners of the land in the area, or by purely racial bigotry. But the North
|
||
American continent has been inhabited and "settled" for several centuries by
|
||
groups of people Christopher Columbus mistakenly labeled as 'Indians', thinking
|
||
he had reached India.
|
||
|
||
In fact, the natives of this continent have been here so long, they have evolved
|
||
into several dozens of completely different people, sharing dozens of different
|
||
languages, traditions, ways of life, and even physical characteristics. Numerous
|
||
large volumes have been written about the various Native Americans, but this
|
||
brief story will center on those who lived and worked in the same area as the
|
||
Cleveland Free-Net, the first system of public access computing of many, we
|
||
hope.
|
||
|
||
Many centuries ago, most of this continent was under the influence of the ice
|
||
cap which covered the area. A person could walk on the ice all the way from
|
||
central Asia, across what we now know as the Bering Sea, and all across the top
|
||
half of North America; in fact, many did. They propagated not only east to the
|
||
Atlantic, but southwards as well, eventually peopling the whole hemisphere.
|
||
Before the age of rapid travel and instant communications, many of these groups
|
||
of people must have shared common roots, as evidenced by so many similarities
|
||
in their ways of life, their deities, some of their languages, etc. The Inuit
|
||
people speak a common language all across the top half of the continent, from
|
||
Alaska to Greenland, even today. Further south, languages and most traditions
|
||
and ways of life adapted to the territory in which they found themselves,
|
||
usually pursuing food or escaping their enemies.
|
||
|
||
What little we know of the earliest people of the area comes from the few things
|
||
we have found that they left behind, principally in their graves. Only a very
|
||
few have been found, and it is difficult to gain a true perspective from such
|
||
limited sources. "Ohio's Prehistoric Peoples", written by Martha A. Potter, and
|
||
published by the Ohio Historical Society in 1968, gives us some insight into the
|
||
earliest time periods. The book includes drawings which compare their arrow
|
||
heads, tools, pipes, and other artifacts.
|
||
|
||
The very earliest time period in which it is possible to identify inhabitants of
|
||
the Ohio valley is that between 9000 and 6000 BC, when the Paleo-Indian people
|
||
were here. All we know about them is that they used a fluted-edge tool made of
|
||
flint in their hunting and gathering. The ice cap had 'just' retreated, and
|
||
animals had likely moved back into the area some 11,000 years ago. The Archaic
|
||
people were the next we can identify, between 6000 and 1500 BC. In addition to
|
||
flint tools, they used primitive stone tools. Perhaps they started fishing in
|
||
the great lake. The Glacial Kame people came along next, probably descendents
|
||
of the earlier peoples. They were the first to use copper for making tools and
|
||
jewelry, 2500 - 1000 BC; notice the overlap in time frames. All of this is
|
||
based on just a few graves that have been found.
|
||
|
||
Carbon dating of the few materials which survived that far back allow iden-
|
||
tification of the Adena people, 1000 BC - 700 AD. They were the first farmers
|
||
in the area, and built huts in settlements. They also built the earliest
|
||
mounds, including the Serpent. Again an overlap; the people first found on the
|
||
Hopewell Farm in Ross County lived here between 300 BC and 700 AD. They not
|
||
only built mounds, but heroic-proportioned earthen works, and are known as the
|
||
Hopewells. Next came the Cole people, named for the finding on the Walter S.
|
||
Cole site in Delaware County, who lived there between 800 - 1300 AD. Each
|
||
of these peoples probably evolved from the other as time went by. There are
|
||
differences in the artifacts they left behind, as well as differences in
|
||
locations and types of burials; hence the differences in name. Part of the
|
||
evolutionary cycle was likely due to changes in the atmosphere which led to
|
||
differences in vegetation and animal life, not to mention the evolution in
|
||
finding and utilizing raw materials for tools, shelter and clothing. We come to
|
||
the last of these pre-historic peoples in the time frame of 1000 - 1654 AD; in
|
||
southern Ohio we had the Fort Ancients, and in the north we had the Eries.
|
||
These were the first who apparently used the bow and arrow in this area.
|
||
|
||
All of these various peoples used flint in their spearheads and other tools.
|
||
While there was a large supply of flint in Coshocton County, the more famous
|
||
flint came from Flint Ridge in Licking and Muskingum Counties; this flint was of
|
||
a higher quality, and had various colors. But not all of the flint was found
|
||
here in Ohio; some came from across the lake in Ontario, as we shall soon see.
|
||
Now we come to the historic period. We come to the time period of the 15th -
|
||
17th centuries, where there are some reasonable records and artifacts. Large
|
||
numbers of Native Americans inhabited the entire eastern seaboard, the Saint
|
||
Lawrence valley, the Great Lakes area, and all points south and west. Principal
|
||
villages were close to sources of drinking water, and near land that could be
|
||
cleared, tilled and planted, as well as near the areas where animals that
|
||
provided food and skins could be located. They had to compete with one another
|
||
for these various necessities, and tribal warfare was not uncommon. When they
|
||
defeated an enemy tribe, they frequently tortured, killed or maimed most of the
|
||
members of the defeated group. But it was not uncommon for them to adopt some
|
||
of the defeated people as their own, either for chattels or for mates; they were
|
||
well aware of the need not to marry a close relative, and most tribes specifi-
|
||
cally forbade marrying someone from their own clan or sept.
|
||
|
||
Living along the northern shore of Lake Erie, as we now know it, and west into
|
||
the area we now call southeastern Michigan, and northwestern Ohio, were the
|
||
people that French explorers named Neutral, so named because they took no part
|
||
in the wars between the Huron and Iroquois. In fact, they were not only hunters
|
||
and farmers, they also had a monopoly on flint from their quarries near Point
|
||
Abino in southern Ontario, and were experienced traders. Their principal allies
|
||
included the Wenrohronon. (aka Wenro's) The Wenrohronon lived in a small area
|
||
in what we now call New York state, along the south shore of Lake Ontario. The
|
||
tribal name meant "people of the place of the floating scum"; they had oil in
|
||
their local water. Their alliance with the Neutrals fell apart in 1639, and
|
||
they then sought protection with the Huron.
|
||
|
||
The Huron were the greater traders, and lived all over southeastern Canada,
|
||
taking over most of Ontario and Quebec provinces. They called themselves
|
||
"Wendat", meaning islanders or peninsula dwellers. The word survives today as
|
||
Wyandotte. Their first documented experience with white men was with Jacques
|
||
Cartier, along the St. Lawrence river, in 1534. At this time, they were at war
|
||
with the Iroquois, and were subsequently driven from the area to Huronia, where
|
||
Samuel de Champlain found them in 1615. Champlain helped them mount several
|
||
attacks against the Iroquois, but they were eventually defeated by them, in
|
||
1648-50. Fleeing from the Iroquois, the Huron moved west and north, living
|
||
amongst the several peoples around the northern and western parts of the Great
|
||
Lakes. In 1745, a large party of Huron moved into the area we now call Sandus-
|
||
ky. Except for a brief move to White River, Indiana, they ranged all over Ohio
|
||
in the coming years, finally allowing the Shawnee from the south, and the
|
||
Delaware from the east, to move into Ohio in the mid-18th century as neighbors.
|
||
Prior to this, though, they were friendly with the Erighs (Eries).
|
||
|
||
This tribe of people, called the "Cat People", lived all along the south shore
|
||
of Lake Erie, to which they gave it's name. Their neighbors to the west were
|
||
the Neutrals and the Miamis, and later the Wyandotte (Huron). To the east were
|
||
the dreaded and powerful Iroquois. To the south, they knew the Honniasont, and
|
||
southwest the Shawnee. Because of their alliance with the Huron, they were
|
||
defeated as a people by the Iroquois in 1656. Their bows and arrows were no
|
||
match for the guns provided to the Iroquois by Dutch traders. The Iroquois
|
||
wanted the hunting grounds of Ohio. The mountains they were raised in were no
|
||
match for the fertile, and relatively flat, lands of Ohio and the Can-tuc-kee
|
||
as the Shawnee called it. (Kentucky).
|
||
|
||
The Miami had been pushed around long enough by the time the wars with the
|
||
whites got them so heavily involved. They had begun in the area near Green Bay,
|
||
Wisconsin, and migrated, or escaped, to the south and west, and then east, such
|
||
that they had people scattered between Chicago and Detroit, and all along the
|
||
border between Ohio and Indiana. Named after them are the rivers Miami, Little
|
||
Miami, and Maumee. In conjunction with the Shawnee and several other tribes,
|
||
they participated in, and lost, the Battle of the Fallen Timbers in 1794, which
|
||
led to the treaty of Greenville in 1795, when most of eastern and southern Ohio
|
||
was taken from the red men, and opened up to white settlers. The Army General
|
||
who had won this battle, marching out of his Fort Defiance, was "Mad" Anthony
|
||
Wayne. His aide was William Henry Harrison.
|
||
|
||
The Shawnee, meaning "southerners", migrated into the area from Tennessee.
|
||
Their 5 tribes included the Piqua, Chillikothe, and Kispokotha, as well as 2
|
||
others. Their principal areas of settlement were southern Ohio, and reached
|
||
into western Pennsylvania, mostly along the Ohio river and her tributaries.
|
||
When the white men started pushing west over the Appalachians, the Shawnee were
|
||
most adamant about repelling the invasion. One of their earlier war chiefs was
|
||
a Kispokotha adoptee, a white man who took the name Blue Jacket (d. 1810); he
|
||
had been born Marmaduke van Swearingen, and is possibly related to the van
|
||
Sweringens who developed the Nickel Plate Railroad, Shaker Heights, Ohio, and
|
||
the Terminal Tower complex. 'Duke' was from the same area of Virginia as the
|
||
ancestors of our more modern van Sweringens. Later, the great chief Tecumseh led
|
||
the Shawnee and thousands of other native Americans in trying to repel the
|
||
spread of white men into their lands; he died in 1813.
|
||
|
||
Another famous chief was an Ottawa named Pontiac, who came from the area we now
|
||
know as Detroit, Michigan. The Ottawa had been located in the area of Canada
|
||
north of Lake Huron, but ranged far to the east, in concert with the Huron
|
||
Nation. Champlain visited them on Georgian Bay in 1615. Following the defeat
|
||
of the Huron by the Iroquois, they were forced west and south, settling in the
|
||
areas around Lakes Michigan, Huron, St. Clair and Superior, where they went into
|
||
the fur business, trading with the French for needed goods. They were principal
|
||
allies of the French during the French & Indian Wars.
|
||
|
||
Also in Ohio from time to time, and playing major roles in the various wars and
|
||
treaties, were the Illinois, Chippewa, Kickapoo, Mosopelea and Potawatomi. But
|
||
their principal homelands were elsewhere. And in southeastern Ohio in later
|
||
years were the Indians who confederated as the Mingoes; they were of these
|
||
and other further east tribes and nations.
|
||
|
||
Supporting the British all this time were the Iroquois, who had wanted to stay
|
||
out of it all, but were forced into defending their lands against the hated
|
||
French (and their enemies of old who were aligned with the French). The
|
||
"Iroquois" is perhaps a misnomer; there was not just one tribe known as the
|
||
Iroquois. In fact, the Iroquois were a confederation of five separate nations,
|
||
later six, principally from the state of New York, but who operated in a very
|
||
large area, as far south as the Potomoc, and as far west as the Mississippi.
|
||
Their principal hunting grounds were in Ohio. From east to west, they included
|
||
the Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga and Seneca; later they were joined by the
|
||
Tuscarora. Legend has it that they were once warring with one another, but were
|
||
united into a League of Nations by Hiawatha and Dekanawida. They had a demo-
|
||
cratic form of government, with two 'houses' and a judiciary. While I have not
|
||
yet found written documentation from the period among European sources, (there
|
||
was no written language then among the Iroquois, and only word of mouth trans-
|
||
cripts of their legends survive), they did have a constitution, rumored to date
|
||
from somewhere around 1390, give or take 100 years. You will find it in the
|
||
section of Free-Net with other documents that preceeded The Constitution of the
|
||
United States.
|
||
|
||
As referenced in "The Genius of the People", it is said that their constitution
|
||
began with the phrase: "We, the people, to form a union..."; it was this
|
||
constitution that John Rutledge of South Carolina used as a basis for coordinat-
|
||
ing the several details of the Philadelphia debates into what we now call the
|
||
Constitution of the United States. But that Iroquois constitution, reproduced
|
||
elsewhere in The Freedom Shrine, does NOT contain this phrase, nor anything like
|
||
it. There are many other references to this form of government among the
|
||
Iroquois, as well as contacts between the Framers and members of this confedera-
|
||
tion. See the speech elsewhere in this Freedom Shrine by Dr. Donald Grinde. See
|
||
also the lengthy bibliography, from which came most of these details.
|
||
|
||
GERALD E. MURPHY (c) 1988
|
||
|
||
|