Part
II, Chapter I
FIRST
SETTLEMENT IN OHIO.
Whether
or not old Father Time moved with any greater swiftness in these latter days
than he did in the centuries that are gone, events seem to thicken and more is
accomplished. This great state of
Ohio, which ranks as third in the grand Republic, a little than a century ago
was a wilderness, teeming, to be sure, with riches, but had for inhabitants only
the wild Indians, who did not know how to develop the vast resources wrapped up
in a rich soil, wonderful forests hidden treasures of coal and iron, and oil to
create light in dwellings and cause the busy wheels of machinery to run
smoothly.
In
the middle of the eighteenth century the Delaware Indians occupied nearly all of
the eastern half of what is now the state of Ohio.
The Chippewas were gathered around the southern shore of Lake Erie.
The Ottawas occupied the valleys of the Maumee and Sandusky.
The Shawanees were in the Scioto valley.
The Miamis dwelt by the side of the rivers that bear their name.
A part of the Wyandots, who the French called Mingoes, with the half-king
had settled at the mouth of the Sandusky and the remainder at Detroit.
The
Piquas were a branch of the Shawanees. These
tribes were not, however, strictly confined to the territories mentioned.
The Shawanees had a village called Logstown, seventeen miles below
Pittsburgh, in the district of the Delawares.
This last mentioned tribe had been driven from the Delaware to the
Susquehanna, and from thence to the Allegheny, and again from there still
further west until at last they settled down on the generous gift of the
Wyandots. The boundary of this
tract began at the Beaver river and extended to the Cuyahoga, and along Lake
Erie to the Sandusky, up the Sandusky to the Hocking, down the Hocking to the
Ohio.
The
name, Delaware, is not Indian but came from the name of an early governor of
Virginia, Lord De la War. Their own
name for their tribe was Lenni Lenape, Indian for the Genesis term—man. By all
the tribes mentioned, the Delawares seem to have been the most susceptible of
civilization and the readiest to accept the Christian religion. It was among
them that the self-sacrificing Moravians labored so successfully, and the
victims who were the subjects of that saddest of sad stories, the massacre of
the Christian Indians in Ohio, belonged to this tribe.
When
the Revolutionary War began, it had been computed that the Indians of New York,
Ohio and the lakes, would muster not less than ten thousand warriors. During the
struggle between the northern country and the colonies, there were but few
Indians that took sides with the colonies. The Iroquois, who had their principal
seat in New York, were divided. The majority adhered to the British, while the
Oneidas and Tuscarawas were induced to remain neutral, mainly through the
influence of the missionary, Samuel Kirkland. In like manner the heroic and
indefatigable Zeisberger for some time kept the Delawares from joining the ranks
of the enemy. Thus on the western continent a zealous missionary held in check
the Red men and kept them from the pillage and murder of the inhabitants, while
the same important service was done in a similar way farther to the eastward.
This
two-fold influence prevented a general rising of the Indians in the early part
of the war, when the condition of things was most critical. It is true that
later nearly all the Delawares went over to the British, but it was after the
defeat of Burgoyne and the alliance made with France, when the Americans were
better able to manage them. The capital of the Delawares and seat of their grand
council was at the place where Newcomers-town is now situated. It was a large
and flourishing Indian town containing one hundred houses, mostly built of logs.
The
Iroquois in six nations held nominal sway over all these tribes, as well as many
others still further west, claiming to own the country and the allegiance of the
inhabitants by right of conquest.
When preparations were made for the company of the “Ohio country,” there were but few settlements of the Indians found along the Ohio river. It was too easy for the powerful Iroquois to glide down its smooth current and attack their victims when unaware. There were no signs to announce their coming, and no tracks by which it could be ascertained whither they were going. The Delawares and other tribes had, therefore, retreated from the river and only came into the neighborhood thereof when in quest of game.
Preliminaries to the Settlement