History of Ohio; the rise and progress of an American state, Volume One, Part 1

Author: Randall, E. O. (Emilius Oviatt), 1850-1919 cn; Ryan, Daniel Joseph, 1855-1923 joint author
Publication date: 1912
Publisher: New York, The Century History Company
Number of Pages: 700


USA > Ohio > History of Ohio; the rise and progress of an American state, Volume One > Part 1


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org.


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32



Gc 977.1 R15 v.1 326586


PUBLIC LIBRARY FORT WAYNE & ALLEN CO .. IND.


GENEALOGY COLLECTION


GEN


ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY 3 1833 02324 117 4


HISTORY OF OHIO


Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2016


https://archive.org/details/historyofohioris01 rand


AUBERT CAVALIER DE LA SALLE


History of Ohio


АЛМАЗ АЈ НА ЯЗНАЧАЈ ТЯЗНОЯ


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American State


By -


EMILIUS O. RANDALL And DANIEL T RYAN


VOLUME ONE By EMILIUS O. RANDALL


THE CENTURY HISTORY COMPANY


1912


1


ROBERT CAVALIER DE LA SALLE.


The Greatest Discoverer and Explorer of the French in America. It was he who first navigated the waters of the Ohio and so far as reliable records testify was the first white man to discover that river, which he did in his voyage of 1669-70.


-


History of Ohio


The Rise and Progress of an American State


By EMILIUS O. RANDALL and DANIEL J. RYAN


VOLUME ONE By EMILIUS O. RANDALL


THE CENTURY HISTORY COMPANY NEW YORK 1912


Printed by John C. Rankin Company for The Century History Company


COPYRIGHT 1912 BY THE CENTURY HISTORY COMPANY ALL RIGHTS RESERVED


Publication Office 54 Dey Street, New York, N. Y. U. S. A.


FOREWORD


326586


I N THE preparation of the two volumes covering the pre-state period of Ohio history, the writer has not only carefully consulted all publications of second-hand authority, extant and available, but has diligently examined the reprints of original documents, which might contribute to the purpose in hand, such as the colonial archives and state papers, official records, diaries, letters and personal memoirs. The writer, moreover, has visited almost every site in the state, touched upon in his narrative, that the local situation and tradition, if any exist, might be obtained to stimulate the writer's interest, to verify or correct, if possible, the descriptions and statements by others and thus by the "local coloring" perhaps make more vivid and accurate the account herewith set forth. These volumes, be it understood, were written not for the technical scholar, seeking the bare data in elaborate and exhausting detail; such investi- gators may go direct to the original sources as the writer has done. These volumes were written, rather, with the purpose of concisely portraying the more important events in early Ohio history and presenting . them in their relative and chronological order, in simple narrative form for the general reader. A history for the public should be first reliable, second readable. With that aim the writer confesses to have striven. To what extent he has succeeded, the reader must decide; "what's writ is writ-would it were worthier."


E. O. R.


CONTENTS


CHAPTER I.


PREHISTORIC; HILLTOP FORTS.


Man's Appearance in Ohio.


3


Remains of the Mound Builders. 5


Mystery of Their Identity 6


Territory Evidencing Their Habitation 7


Mound Builders in Ohio 8


Hilltop Enclosures


9


Spruce Hill Fort.


IO


Fort Hill, Highland County 12


Glenford Stone Fort.


15


"Miami Fort," on the Ohio 17


System of Hilltop Signals 20


Butler County Fort.


21


Fort Ancient


23


Old and New Forts 24


Walls of the Fort .. 25


Gateways of the Fort. 26


27


Classification of Skulls 28


Village of the Old Fort. 29


Fort Ancient Hand-made. 30


Age and Purpose of the Fort. 31


CHAPTER II.


PREHISTORIC; LOWLAND ENCLOSURES.


Varieties of Form and Purpose 35


The Newark Works. 36


Result of Manual Labor. 38


Effigy Mounds in Ohio 39


Flint Ridge.


40


Works at Marietta 42


Portsmouth Works. . 43


Localities of Mound Builders.


45


Mound City and Hopetown Group 46


Dunlap and Hopewell Groups.


47


Scioto River and Paint Creek. 48


Isolated Mounds. 49


Cemetery of the Old Fort


X


THE RISE AND PROGRESS


Mounds the First Tombs 50


Mound Burials 51


Mound Explorations. 52


Exploration of Adena Mound. 53


Relics in Burials 55


CHAPTER III.


PREHISTORIC: VILLAGE SITES.


Gartner Mound Village. 59


Primitive "Bill of Fare" 60


Baum Village Site. 61


Construction of Tepees. 62


Primitive Dog and Animals.


63


Harness Mound and Contents.


65


Mills' Investigations.


66


Charnel Houses and Burials


67


Copper and Pearl Ornaments


68


Seip Group and Discoveries 69


70


No Written Records


72


Archæological Frauds.


73


Serpent Mound. 74


Putnam's Description 75


Antiquity of the Mound Builder 76


Origin of Mound Builders 78


Indian Theory 79


CHAPTER IV.


HISTORIC BEGINNINGS OF OHIO.


Ohio Belongs to Spain . 84


Line of Demarcation Decree 85


Rights of Discovery 86


De Soto Lands at Tampa. 87


Penetrates to the Mississippi. 88


Cabots Make Landfalls. 89


French and Spanish Rivalry 90


Cartier Enters St. Lawrence. 91


Champlain Founds Quebec . 92


Defeat of Spanish Armada. 93


Madisonville Cemetery


Extent of Exhumations 71


OF AN AMERICAN STATE xi


English Discoveries in America. 94


Plymouth and London Companies 95


Champlain Encounters Iroquois 96


Description of Iroquois.


97


Hiawatha the Great Chief.


98


The "Long House" Confederacy


99


The French Push to the Northwest.


I02


Coureurs de bois 103


The Recollets and Jesuits 104


Jean Nicollet


105


CHAPTER V.


LA SALLE DISCOVERS THE OHIO.


Iroquois Conquer Hurons 109


War Against the Eries. IIO


Siege of Riqué. II2


Southern Conquest of Iroquois II4


Indian Gathering at St. Marie. 115


Saint-Lusson Claims Northwest. II6


Sieur de la Salle. 117


Settles at La Chine II8


La Salle Starts for the Ohio.


119


Visits Seneca Village. I20


Arrives at Otinawatawa. I21


Meets Party of Joliet . I22 Whereabouts of La Salle Unknown 123


Supposed to have been on Ohio I25


Theories as to His Route. I26


Evidence of the Maps. I28


CHAPTER VI.


THE IROQUOIAN CONQUESTS.


Journey of Joliet and Marquette I33


They Navigate the Mississippi I34


La Salle's Plan of Forts. I35


He Reports to the King. 136


Builds the Griffin I37


Sails Lakes Erie and Michigan. 138


Erects Fort Creve-Cœur 139


Returns to Fort Frontenac 140


xii


THE RISE AND PROGRESS


Fate of Tonty 14I


Iroquois Attack Illinois Tribes 142


Return of La Salle to Illinois. I43


La Salle on the Mississippi


I44


Reaches Gulf of Mexico


I45


Tragic End of La Salle. 146


Title to Land by Discovery


148


CHAPTER VII.


THE INDIAN TRIBES OF OHIO.


Topography of Ohio. 155


The "Divide". 156


Ethnological Place of Indian 157


Varieties of Indian 158


Indian has no Written Language. 159


Algonquin Group 160


Siouan and Shoshonean Groups. 161


Miamis of Ohio I62


The Wyandots 163


The Ottawas 164


The Delawares 165


The Tuscarawas and Mingoes I66


The Shawnees. 167


No Native Ohio Tribes. 170


Ohio Supremacy of the Iroquois. I72


Clinton-Harrison Controversy 173


Iroquois Valued Ohio I78


CHAPTER VIII.


INDIAN TITLES TO OHIO.


Albany-Iroquois Council of 1684. 183


Albany Treaty of 1701. 185


Error of Bancroft and Winsor. 187


Mohawk Chiefs Visit London. I88


Spotswood Visits Valley of Virginia. 189


John Howard Voyages the Ohio 190


Indian Council of 1726. 191


Lancaster Council of 1744 192


Speech of Canassatego. 194


French Build Forts 195


OF AN AMERICAN STATE Xiii


English Scheme for Territory 196


No Jesuit Missions in Ohio 197


Sandusky Mission . 198


French and English Clash.


199


Sandusky Bay Scene of Action. 200


Rebellion of Chief Nicolas. 201


Nicolas Abandons His Stockade 203


English Rebuild Fort Sandusky 204


Site of "Fort Sandoski".


205


CHAPTER IX.


THE OHIO LAND COMPANY.


Embassy of Conrad Weiser 211


Stops at Shannopin's Town 213


Meets Montour at Logstown. 214


The Montours. 215


Organization of Ohio Company 216


Company Gets Land Grant


217


Lancaster Treaty of 1748. 219


Celoron's Expedition. 220


Celoron Buries Lead Plates. 222


Expedition Enters Ohio River


224


Ascends Big Miami.


225


Arrives at Pickawillany 226


Entertained by La Damoiselle. 227


Celoron Proceeds to Detroit. 228


Result of Celoron's Trip. 229


Croghan and Montour Visit Miamis 230


CHAPTER X.


JOURNEY OF CHRISTOPHER GIST.


Journey for Ohio Company 235


Reaches Tuscarawas. 236


Holds First Sunday Services 237


Montour and Croghan join Gist. 237


Maps of Ohio. . 239


Story of Mary Harris. 240


Gist Reaches Hock-Hockin. 243


Arrives at Pickawillany 244


Plays for Favor of "Old Britain 246


xiv


THE RISE AND PROGRESS


Gist Returns by Kentucky 247


Croghan and Montour at Logstown. 248


Logstown Treaty of 1752. 249


Langlade Attacks Pickawillany


252


The Siege and Destruction. 253


Journey of Captain William Trent 255


Visits Desolate Site of Pickawillany 256


French Build Fort La Boeuf . 257


Mission of Half King Tanacharison 258


CHAPTER XI.


GEORGE WASHINGTON'S MISSION.


The Boy Washington 264


Becomes a Surveyor 265


Surveys Lands of Lord Fairfax 267


Work in Shenandoah Valley. 268 Mission for Governor Dinwiddie 269


Arrives at Village of Shingiss 270


With Joncaire at Venango. 271


Meets Saint Pierre at La Boeuf. 272


Shot at by Indian Guide. 273


Washington the International Hero 274


CHAPTER XII.


THE OPENING SKIRMISH.


Futile Expedition of Trent 278


Contrecœur Captures Ohio Forks. 279


Washington Reaches Great Meadows 280


Encounter with La Force 281


Washington's Baptism of Fire. 283


Siege of Fort Necessity 285


Surrender of the Fort. 286


Contest for the Ohio Country


287


Sir William Johnson. 288


Albany Council of 1754. 289 General Braddock Arrives 291


Advance on Fort Duquesne 293


Defeat of Braddock. 294


Washington's Bravery . 296


Braddock's Death and Burial. 298


OF AN AMERICAN STATE


XV


CHAPTER XIII.


THE FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR.


Attitude of the Ohio Tribes 301


The Tribes Distrust the French 302


Message of Scruniyatha 303


The French Build Forts 304


Inactivity of the Colonies.


305


Attitude of the Delawares


307


French-Indian Forces


308


Position of the Six Nations 309


England Declares War Against France 310


Delawares Attack the English


3II


Attacks by Tedyuskung. 312


Dilemma of the Ohio Tribes 313


Speech of Ackowanothio 314


Story of Mary (Draper) Ingles


317


CHAPTER XIV.


CAPTURE OF FORT DUQUESNE.


Shawnees go on the War Path. 327


Captivity of Captain James Smith. 328


Smith's Journeyings in Ohio 330


Ohio Tribes Raid the Frontiers 332


Views of De Vaudreuil. 333


Long House Becomes Divided 334


British Cabinet Reorganized. 335


Dinwiddie Resigns as Governor 336


Forbes' Expedition against Fort Duquesne. 337


Embassy of Christian Post. 338


Post's Opinion of the Indians 339


Peace Convention at Easton. 340


Forbes' Campaign Force 341


Henry Bouquet Aide to Forbes 342


Washington Commands a Regiment 343


Dispute Over the Route 344


Major James Grant Repulsed. 345


Fort Duquesne Deserted . 346


Forks of the Ohio Fall to the British 347


xvi


THE RISE AND PROGRESS


CHAPTER XV.


EXPEDITION OF ROGER'S RANGERS.


French Surrender Montreal 353


Robert Rogers' Rangers 354


The Rangers Start West. 355


Reach Mouth of Cuyahoga 356


Meeting with Pontiac.


357


Truth as to the Meeting


360


Rangers Reach Detroit 361


French Yield the Fort. 362


Rogers' Subsequent Career 363


Fort Still Held by French.


364


English Treatment of Indians.


365


William Johnson visits Detroit


366


Hold Council with Indians


367


Peace Treaty of Paris 368


War Not Over in America 369


British Dominate the Tribesmen 370


Quebec Act of 1763.


371


Provincial Governments Established 372


Settlers Excluded from Northwest.


373


CHAPTER XVI.


CONSPIRACY OF PONTIAC.


The Ottawa Confederacy 379


Birthplace of Pontiac. 380


Pontiac's Appearance 381


His Cunning 382


Indian Hostility to the British 383


Ohio Tribes in the Conspiracy 384


Pontiac Addresses His People. 385


Siege of Fort Detroit.


387


Pontiac's Treachery Foiled . 389


390


Indians Attack French Reserve.


Enumeration of Pontiac's Force 392


Pontiac Asks Aid of French. 393


Ambuscade of Dalzell's Troops 394


Wilkin's Relief Expedition 395


Pontiac Raises the Siege 396


Destruction of Fort Sandusky 397


Pontiac's Promissory Notes.


391


OF AN AMERICAN STATE xvii


Capture of Fort Michilimackinac 400


Indians Take Fort Miami. 402


Seizure of Presque Isle and La Boeuf 403


Result of Pontiac's Conspiracy


404


Fort Pitt Remains Impregnable. 405


Bouquet's Battle of Bushy Run. 407


CHAPTER XVII.


BRADSTREET'S EXPEDITION.


Report of Johnson to Lords of Trade 41I


Israel Putnam to Accompany Bradstreet 412


Putnam's Military Experience. 413


James Montresor to be Engineer 414


Bradstreet Reaches Niagara 416


Pontiac Still Hostile. 417


Indian Council at Presque Isle


Bradstreet Proceeds West


419


Arrives at Sandusky Bay


420


Indian Council at Detroit. 421


Embassy of Morris 423


Morris Meets Pontiac. 424


Experiences of Morris. 425


Bradstreet Starts on Return 426


Encamps on Sandusky River


427


Wyandot Refugee Site. 428


Indian Chiefs Visit Bradstreet. 429


Putnam's Report.


430


Bradstreet Returns to Albany 431


CHAPTER XVIII.


BOUQUET'S EXPEDITION.


Bouquet Starts for Ohio Interior 435


Indian Council at Fort Pitt. 436


Order of March and Route. 437


Bouquet's Camps 12 and 13. 438


Imposing Council with Indians 439


Bouquet's Address to the Indians. 440


Bouquet's Camp No. 16 44I


Bouquet Deposes Netawatwees 442


Indians Surrender White Captives 443


Xviii


THE RISE AND PROGRESS


End of Bouquet's Expedition. 444


Indian Deputies Visit Fort Pitt. 445


Speech of Shawnee Orator Kaské. 446


Alexander Fraser Visits Ohio Country 447


George Croghan's Embassy 448


Croghan's Party Attacked. 449


Croghan Reaches Vincennes 450


Pontiac Meets Croghan. 451


Croghan Reaches Detroit. 452


Pontiac Repairs to Oswego 453


Received by Sir Johnson 454


Close of Pontiac's Career 455


Character of Pontiac. 457


CHAPTER XIX.


OHIO SETTLEMENT SCHEMES.


Indian Gathering at German Flats 461


Cherokee-Iroquois Reconciliation. 463


Fort Stanwix Treaty. 464


Iroquois Deed Territory to English 465


Ohio Land Company 466


The Mississippi Company 467


Walpole Grant Company. 468


Franklin Lobbies for the Colonies. 469


Ohio Company Merged in Walpole Grant. 470 Franklin's Views on Situation. 471


Settlers Crossing the Mountains 472


Daniel Boone. 473


Penetrates Wilds of Kentucky 474


Byron's poem on Boone. 475


CHAPTER XX.


WASHINGTON'S OHIO JOURNEY.


Washington's Schooling Days 479


Promotes "Ohio Movement" 480


Washington Surveys for Lord Fairfax. 481 Washington's First Journal. 482


Washington Marries Mrs. Custis 483


Member of House of Burgesses 484


Meets William Crawford. 485


OF AN AMERICAN STATE


xix


Washington-Crawford Letters


486


Washington Buys Lands. 487


Washington Starts for the Ohio. 488


Journal of the Journey 489


Stop at Mingo Town 491


Reaches Mouth of Muskingum. 492


Visits Camp of Kiashuta. 493


Walks Across Ohio Neck. 494


Washington's Observations 495


ILLUSTRATIONS


Robert Cavalier De La Salle


Frontispiece Facing page 8


Spruce Hill Fort.


¥


I3


Glenford Stone Fort.


15


Miami Fort.


18


Butler County Fort.


¥


¥


24


Walls of Fort Ancient.


27


Great Gateway and Stone Grave


¥


31


Newark Earth Works


36


Marietta Works


¥


42


The Scioto Valley


45


Paint Creek.


¥


¥


47


Adena and Gartner Mound ·


53


Gartner Mound Grave


59


Edwin Harness Mound Grave


¥


65


Serpent Mound.


¥


74


Toscanelli's Map.


¥


83


Samuel de Champlain


92


Iroquois Long House


99


Nicolet's Landing


¥


I33


Jacques Marquette


¥


I36


Louis Joliet .


140


Celoron's Lead Plate


222


Evan's Ohio Map.


235


Mitchell's Ohio Map


240


Hutchin's Ohio Map.


¥ 245


Washington a Surveyor.


268


Sir William Johnson


¥


288


Braddock's Battlefield.


292


Braddock's Defeat


294


Robert Rogers.


354


Pontiac and Major Rogers


357


The Louisiana Territory


368


Pontiac


¥


381


Bouquet's Map.


435


Bouquet's Ohio Route.


438


Bouquet's Indian Conference.


445


Bouquet Receiving the Captives.


450


Daniel Boone.


473


Archæological Map of Ohio


IO


Fort Hill, Highland County,


¥


21


Fort Ancient


¥


¥


105


Discovery of the Mississippi


CHAPTER I. PREHISTORIC; HILLTOP FORTS


T HE initial appearance of man upon the stage of life in North America was an event the date of which is in great dispute, for if the original American left any record of his advent it has not withstood "the tooth of time and the razure of oblivion."


Some two score years or more ago, the owner of a gold drift, near Angelos, California, claimed to have found in the shaft of a mine, a human skull, embedded in the bowels of the earth, one hundred and fifty feet deep, beneath beds of lava, volcanic tufa and strata of "auriferous gravel," in a deposit which the geologists state belongs to the Tertiary Age.


Admitting that this relic of ancient humanity was really found in the lodgment as claimed and that it came there through no modern artifice or accidental placement, then, says a distinguished scientist, "it far antedates anything human which has been discovered in Europe," and therefore plausibly accords America the precedence in the origin of the race.


This "primal pioneer of pliocene formation" was the famous Calavaras skull, which "broke up" Bret Harte's "Society upon the Stanislow," and the genu- ineness of which has been the subject of much contro- versy among savants.


Ohio, too, has its primordial man. There was a time, scientists assert, when the northern and western portion of the state was submerged beneath great fields of ice that slid slowly down from the north. Later nature shook off the chill; her heart grew warm; there was a great melt,


" The loosened ice-ridge breaks away-


The smitten waters flash;"


4


THE RISE AND PROGRESS


and the hills peeped forth and the valleys grew green and the streams sparkled on the mountain side, rippled in the valleys and ran their way through the glad earth.


In the beds of the drift gravel, which the frozen flood caught in its journey and brought from the far north and left in its wide wake, have been found alleged evidences of the glacial, paleolithic man-the man of the early stone age, the man who was made "when nature was but an apprentice" and whose fate was to "reside in thrilling regions of thick-ribbed ice."


Science sometimes, apparently to the unacademic mind, hangs its conclusions upon slender threads. The proof of the arrival and sojourn of the original ice-man in Ohio rests chiefly upon the discovery, within recent years, of three paleoliths, found respectively in Hamilton, Clermont and Tuscarawas counties. These paleoliths are flint implements, less than the size of a man's hand and undoubtedly chipped into shape by the crudest artisan. In each case the paleolith was found many feet beneath the surface in a gravel deposit, "brought down by the turbulent floods from the north." These paleoliths, argue the scientists, must have been in use, in the localities where found, by primitive man in the glacial period, prior to the final disappearance of the ice sheet. Those who care to enter upon details of these discoveries and the arguments resulting there- from, are referred to the numerous scientific works among which may be suggested, "The Ice Age in North America," by Dr. G. Frederick Wright; "Prim- itive Man in Ohio," by Warren K. Moorehead, and the "Archeological History of Ohio," by Gerard Fowke.


5


OF AN AMERICAN STATE


None of these paleoliths, all of which are undoubtedly of a type indicative of the most primitive man, bears any resemblance to the artifacts-of the Mound Builder or the Indian-found by the thousands in the mounds and graves and on the surface in all parts of the state. But the credibility of the evidence, offered by these flint implements, is the great question. From a legal point of view, this paleolithic testimony, as to the local presence of the glacial man, is purely circum- stantial, and in the absence of further corroborative witnesses, we are not certain that the Ohio "ice-man" could not establish an alibi.


But leaving the fate of the "Buckeye" glacial man to the forum of geological and ethnological science, we pass to the consideration of another early Ohioan, hardly less mysterious, but more evidential as to his existence and character. That man for want of a better descriptive name we designate as the Mound Builder.


To enter upon the domain of the Mound Builder, wonderful and enigmatical in his works, is like seeking to grope one's way through the fabled labyrinths of Egypt and Crete, for one is soon lost in a maze of al- luring speculation, from which the guiding hand of knowledge is withheld. The Mound Builder is the riddle of the American race and the countless mani- festations of his handiwork defy explanation while they ever excite our admiration and amazement. The earliest European explorers in their voyages through the unbroken wilds of North America, found these earthen structures of a prehistoric people intact and perfect but solitary and tenantless, with no living being


6


THE RISE AND PROGRESS


to tell aught of their origin, age or purpose. Who were these people that came, wrought and disappeared into the impenetrable mists of the past?


" Let the mighty mounds That overlook the rivers, or that rise In the dim forest crowded with old oaks, Answer. A race, that long has passed away, Built them ;- a disciplined and populous race Heaped, with long toil, the earth, while yet the Greek Was hewing the Pentelicus to forms Of symmetry, and rearing on its rock The glittering Parthenon."


Just what relation, ethnological and archeological, the builders of the mounds bore to the Mississippi Valley and its branch basins will probably never be fully known. So far as the vestiges, discovered by the early European intruder, can testify, the portion of the United States embraced within the central valley named and its tributaries, was the chief domain and center of those peculiar people. Whether this territory was the land of his origin; a great way-station in the pilgrimage of his race through its earthly existence; or was the terminus of prolonged peregrinations, has not been determined.


Concerning the inscrutable Mound Builder and his monuments, the accumulated literature, by official authorities, voluntary scientists, amateur investigators, poetic romancers and irresponsible, irrepressible and illiterate dreamers, is appalling in quantity, discursive and contradictory in statement and theory, conflicting in conclusions and often amusing and absurd. Being without the pale of definite knowledge the Mound


7


OF AN AMERICAN STATE


Builder and his achievements afford untrammeled scope for the imagination. He literally left "foot- prints on the sands of time," but their trail leads only to oblivion. He bequeathed to the succeeding ages no written records, and his temples tell no tales as to their time or purpose. His only answer to every conceivable guess concerning his origin, age and destiny is his unbroken silence. The Mound Builder is the race with the Iron Mask; nor is there likelihood that his racial features will ever be revealed.


But whoever he was, the Mound Builder displayed his activities in a spacious arena, and if the whole North American continent was not his, a large part of it was, for his habitations extended from the Allegheny River to the Rocky Mountain range, and in some instances on to the Pacific slope. He is almost unknown in New England. He is found in lower Canada, but he evi- dently avoided the colder climates and in the south he was much in evidence, for his works dot the shores of the Mexican gulf, from Texas to Florida, and are found in Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, the Carolinas, Tennessee and Kentucky. The Northwest Territory, however, produces evidences of his densest population; at least there his achievements were the most numerous and important. In Wisconsin his character apparently took on a "religious turn," for along its river courses, and about the shores of its lakes, he adorned the sides and summits of the hills with innumerable effigies of animals, birds, reptiles and even human beings- presumptively tributes to his superstitious belief, symbols of his crude worship or possibly emblematic totems of his various tribes. Michigan did not greatly


8


THE RISE AND PROGRESS


merit his attention, but his mounds are frequently found in Indiana and are numerous in Illinois.


Ohio, however, was a region for which he displayed most remarkable partiality. The banks of "La Belle Riviere," as the early French called the majestic Ohio, and the picturesque and fertile valleys of the Miamis, the Scioto, the Muskingum, the Cuyahoga, and lesser tributary streams were the scenes of his most numerous, most extensive and most "continuous performances." It has been asserted that the localities in Ohio, which testify to the Mound Builders' presence far outnumber the total localities of his evidential habitation in any other state, indeed almost equal those in all the rest of the country. Ohio was the great "State" in prehistoric times, for over twelve thousand places in the present state-limits have been found and noted, where the Mound Builder left his testimonial. Those having the form of enclosures, located on the hill tops and in the plain or river bottoms, the walled-in areas, each embracing, respectively, from one to three hundred acres in area, exceed fifteen hundred in number, while thousands of single mounds of varying circumference and height were scattered over the central and southwestern part of the state. One thing is clearly demonstrated by this tremendous "showing," viz., that these people either continued in more or less sparse numbers through a long space of time or they prevailed in vast numbers during a more or less brief, contemporaneous period, for it has been estimated that the "earthly productions" of their labor, yet standing in Ohio, if placed side by side in a continuous line, would exceed over three hundred miles,




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