While we know our northern friends may not feel it, in the South, Spring is
here. So we thought we'd share a few of our gardening sites appropriate
for this time of the year. Along with gardening, there's grilling, and getting
ready to diet so that you can fit back into that bathing suit this summer!
The following is a list of the various tribes who resided in or resorted to
the Valley of Virginia in 1716-32, and they all spoke the same language or a
dialect of it. This was the mother tongue of the natives from North Carolina to
Massachusetts. This mother tongue received from the French the name of
Algonquin, and under it all the wild tribes of this region were grouped:
I. The Shawanese, the most considerable of the Algonquin tribes, had their
principal villages east of the Alleghenies, near the present town of Winchester,
but their possessions extended west to the Mississippi river. Foote asserts
(Second Series, p. 159) that the Shawanese owned the whole Valley of Virginia,
but had abandoned it. He gives no authority for the statement, and we have found
none in our researches. Of all the Indian tribes with whom our ancestors came in
contact, the Shawanese were the most bloody and terrible, holding all other men,
as well Indians as whites, in contempt as warriors in comparison with
themselves. This estimate of themselves made them more restless and fierce than
any other savages, and they boasted that they had killed ten times as many white
people as any other Indians did. They were a well-formed, active and ingenious
people, capable of enduring great privations and hardships, were assuming and
imperious in the presence of others not of their own nation, and sometimes very
cruel.
II. The Tuscarora, whose villages were near Martinsburg, in the present county
of Berkeley.
III. The Senedo, who occupied the north fork of the Shenandoah until 1732, when
it was exterminated by hostile natives from the South.
IV. The Catawba, whose headquarters were on the Catawba River in South Carolina.
V. The Delaware, who frequented the Susquehanna River in Pennsylvania. "
VI. The Susquehanough, who originally occupied the headwaters of the Chesapeake
bay, but were driven out by the Cinela tribe and took up their residence on the
upper waters of the Potomac, supposed to be one of their favorite places of
residence, as the remains of their villages are more numerous in this region
than elsewhere in the Valley.
VII. The Cinela, on the Upper Potomac.
VIII. The Pascataway tribe, on the headwaters of the Chesapeake.
IX. The Cherokees, who occupied the Upper Valley of the Tennessee River and the
high lands of Carolina, Georgia and Alabama. The Cherokees were the tallest and
most robust of the Southern tribes, their complexions brighter than usual with
the red men, and some of their young women were nearly as fair and blooming as
European women. They owed allegiance to the Muscogulgee, who stood at the head
of a confederacy composed of Cherokees, Seminoles, Chickasaws, Choctaws and
Creeks, and it is probable that bands from all of these tribes, or at least
warriors, accompanied the Cherokees in their annual visits to the Valley.
Without exception, these Southern Indians were proud, haughty and arrogant,
brave and valiant in war, ambitious of conquest, restless and perpetually
exercising their arms, yet magnanimous and merciful to a vanquished enemy when
he submitted and sought their friendship and protection. These vagrant tribes
camped or resided at great distances from each other, were widely dispersed over
a vast country, and any connection between them and particular localities was of
so frail a texture that it was broken by the slightest accident.
The different tribes or nations were small in number as compared with civilized
societies in which industry; arts, agriculture and commerce have united a vast
number of individuals whom a complicated luxury renders valuable to each other.
No accurate information exists as to the numbers composing these tribes, but it
is most probable they did not exceed a few hundred warriors each. At the landing
of the Pilgrims in 1620, the number of Indians in New En gland did not exceed
123,000, and a few years later the number was greatly reduced by a plague. It is
probable that the Indian population of Virginia was larger at this time, as the
climate of our Valley and State is generally better adapted to the wants of man
than that of New England.
Bancroft, however, ventures the opinion that the whole Indian population east of
the Mississippi and south of New England did not, in 1623, exceed 180,000.
Detached parties of armed barbarians from the Northern and Western tribes
occasionally came to the Valley, and the Massawomee penetrated to Eastern
Virginia and were a terror to the low-land tribes Armed parties also visited the
Valley from the five nations situated on the rivers and lakes of New York the
Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga and Seneca.
There was little difference in character and person between these wild men of
whatever tribe, and the remark of Capt. Jno. Smith in his general history. Vol.
i, p 120, that the Cinela were of gigantic size, is now rejected as incredible-a
statement as little to be believed as the fabulous origin-assigned by the Goths
to their enemies, the Huns, namely: that the witches of Scythia had copulated in
the desert with infernal spirits, and that the Huns were the offspring of this
execrable conjunction.
We distrust whatever is marvelous, but it is proper to mention in this
connection that the historian of the Valley gives an account, in his second
chapter, of the discovery, in Hardy county, of the under jaw bone of a.hu man
being of great size, with eight teeth in each side of enormous size, and the
teeth standing in the jaw bone transversely! What is repugnant to experience and
common sense we discredit, and consequently have little faith in this story,
though given upon the authority of a gentleman who represented that he had
himself seen the jaw bone. Within the present year mastodon bones have been
excavated on the Kentucky Central railroad. The supposed human jaw bone found in
Hardy, was doubtless the fossil remain of some extinct animal of the genus
mammiferous.
That portion of the Valley now embraced within the County of Augusta, is not
known to have been the home or fixed residence of any tribe of Indians at the
period of its settlement, nor is it known that it was not the home of some tribe
or branch of a tribe. Such red men as Lewis met on entering Augusta, in 1732,
were friendly, and so continued for over twenty years.
That the country had been, previous to 1732, permanently occupied, is indicated
by the remains of barrows, cairns and ramparts, composed of mingled earth and
stones, found at different points in the county -notably near Waynesboro, on
Lewis creek, a few miles below Staunton; on Middle river near Dudley's mill, and
at Jarman's Gap, north of Rock fish. The cairn at Jarman's Gap is probably
sepulchral, and may have been intended and used as a place of worship. In the
lower Shenandoah Valley and the country west of the Alleghenies in fact over
every part of North America, especially in the Mississippi Valley-there are
remains of fortifications, mounds and other monuments of a primitive race,
bearing marks of great antiquity, which " whisper mysteriously of a shadowy
race, populous, nomadic, not altogether uncivilized, idolatrous," worshipping "
in high places." It does not come within the scope and design of this volume,
however, to investigate the question whether they were the work of the
progenitors of the Indians or of a race long since extinct. That and all similar
matters must be left to those who have taste and leisure for such abstruse
enquiries. We may remark, however, that no remains exist in the Valley which
indicate labor on a large scale or which were worthy, in Jefferson's opinion, to
be styled Indian monuments. He would not dignify with that name their stone
arrow-points, pipes, &c. The Valley of Virginia was, in 1716, when visited by
Spotswood, without extensive forests, but the margins of streams were fringed
with trees; there were pretty woodlands in the low grounds, and the
mountainsides were densely covered with timber trees. The wood destroyed by
Autumnal fires was replaced by a luxuriant growth of blue grass, white clover
and other natural grasses and herbage. The spontaneous productions of the earth
were everywhere numerous and abundant, and there were many varieties of game and
wild animals. The luxuriance of the vegetation evinced the fertility of a soil,
which required only the hand of art to render it in the highest degree
subservient to the wants of man. But the nomads of the Valley were averse to
improvement; their indolence refused to cultivate the earth, and their restless
spirit disdained the confinement of sedentary life. To prevent the growth of
timber and preserve the district as pasture, that it might support as much game
as possible, and that the grass might come forward in the early Spring, the
savages, before retiring into Winter quarters, set on fire the dry grass and
burnt over the country. The absence of trees in an extensive quarter of the
county N.' W. of Staunton led our ancestors to style it "The Barrens," a name
that it still bears, though it is interspersed at this time by handsome
woodlands, the growth of the last eighty years.
As we shall speak in a subsequent page of the physical character and resources
of the present county, nothing further need be now said beyond this, that the
climate of the region west of the mountains was found by the first settlers to
be mild and agreeable, the winds light and bracing, the rain fall ample, storms
and mists rare, the soil fertile, producing trees and grass, and the earth
apparently rich in ores, as indicated by mineral springs.
The two principal non-resident tribes, who frequented this fine country in
1716-1745, were the Delaware from the North and the Catawba from the South. At
the time Augusta was settled, 1732, a bloody war was progressing: between these
tribes, and the Valley was the theatre of action. In this war other tribes now
and again participated as the allies of one or the other party, and it was at a
battle on the North fork of the Shenandoah, in the county now bearing that name,
that the Senedo tribe was exterminated. There is a burial place there eighteen
to twenty feet high and sixty feet in circumference, filled with human bones,
which testify to the truth of this tradition.
Wars between the tribes who frequented the Valley were of constant occurrence,
and much speculation has been indulged in as to their origin -some inclining to
the opinion that there is a natural state of hostility of man against man. It is
more probable, that these wars resulted from the restless and turbulent nature
of mankind, the ambition of leaders and disputes as to the hunting grounds.
Such, indeed, was the red man's martial and independent spirit, his love of
arms, that he considered war and rapine as the pleasure and glory of mankind. It
was the wars of the Iroquois and Massawomie, on the Ohio, which gave that
beautiful stream its significant name of the " River of Blood." The warpaths
conducting into the Valley were through Rockfish and Jarman's gaps, thence by
the present site of Staunton and down the Valley, branching at different points.
Armed parties during this period constantly passed and repassed the white
settlements without disturbing them. Sometimes they spent the night near the
whites, and, when in need, asked for food and other supplies, which were always
given them. If in want of provisions, and no white was near to supply them, they
would kill pigs or cattle running at large, which they considered lawful game.
The settlers were too few and too wise to resent these liberties, and continued
on amicable terms with both Catawba and Delaware when those tribes were, in
1732, and for many years subsequently, at war with each other. And it is worthy
of remark that neither tribe sought to involve the colonists in their quarrels.
When a single Indian, or a party of two or three, called at the hut of a white
for victuals, rest or social conversation, he confidently approached the door
and said, " I am come." Soon the whites set before them food and drink. After
eating and drinking they lit their pipes, and while smoking conversed. This
over, they arose and said, " I go," and off they walked, to stop without an
introduction or invitation at the next habitation the appearance of which they
liked. The sententious brevity with which they announced their arrival and
departure may be ascribed to their limited English vocabulary rather than
rudeness, though it must be allowed that the easy and graceful manners of a
gentleman are not innate. The gradual process by which they are arrived at are
summarized in Pope's line: "He marries, bows at court and grows polite."
The Indian villages in the Valley were principally on the upper waters of the
Potomac, near the present towns of Martinsburg and Winchester, but at some
period previous to the settlement of Augusta, villages had existed at numerous
points on the banks of the streams East and West of the mountains. The spots can
now be identified in Eastern Virginia by the deposits of oyster and muscle
shells, these bivalves constituting a part of their food, and in the Valley by
ashes, charred wood, arrow points, tomahawks, pipes and other remains. Their
huts or wigwams were built by uniting poles at the top and inserting them at
regular distances in the ground. An aperture was left at the top for smoke, and
the ribs or rafters were covered with bark, the skins of wild beasts or with the
boughs of trees. A small opening was left on one side, and in front of this in
warm weather their fires were lit. In winter the fire was made in the centre of
the wigwam, and the savages ranged themselves round it on skins, mats and the
leaves of trees. It was their custom, and a wise one it was, to sleep with their
feet to the fire. Each family had its own hut, but occasionally they allowed
others to enjoy its shelter. Their villages were always located near pure water,
and if possible under the protection of a hill or forest. Their wigwams were
unfurnished, except a covering of leaves and skins, for the dirt floors on which
they slept. They ate without table, chairs, knives or forks.
Their clothing consisted of skins-their feet being encased in a kind of sandal
made of deer skin or other soft leather, called moccasin. It was, unlike the
sandal, with a soft sole, and was ornamented on the upper side. They took fish
with hooks made of fish bones or the spear, or caught them in nets. For hunting
and in war they used clubs, bows and arrows and tomahawks headed with stone.
After the settlement of the whites the heads of tomahawks were made of metal or
their use by the English, with the hammerhead hollowed out to suit the purpose
of a smoking pipe, the mouth-piece being in the end of the shaft. The tomahawk
was the Indian's most valuable weapon. He used it in time of peace for cutting
his firewood, and in war wielded it with deadly effect. Their arrow-points and
scalping-knives were made of flint stone, and many of these are constantly
picked up near Staunton and in other parts of the county.
For passing streams the Indians used canoes, which were made of birch bark,
sewed together with fibers, or roots. Their treatment of females was cruel and
oppressive. They were considered as slaves and treated as such. To the squaw was
assigned the labors of the field and the services of domestic care. Chastity was
not one of the virtues of the women, but when married, they did not dispense
their labors without the consent of their husbands. We have no account of the
marriage ceremony, if such a ceremony existed among them, and imagine the
association of the sexes was a voluntary union, which might be terminated at any
time by consent of the parties. As, however, in all ages and among all people,
religion of some kind has prevailed, and a reverence and awe of a Divinity
existed, and our red men paid honor and homage to the Great Spirit, we do not
feel at liberty to declare that such unions were altogether without religious
character. We shall not dwell upon these matters of marital infidelities, as we
are not called upon to represent human nature in such colors and lineaments as
dishonor her, and do not wish to familiarize the minds of our readers with vice.
A slight allusion to them was important to historic truth, which renders it
necessary to speak of the vices and failings as well as the virtues of a people.
We shall be content with touching thus lightly upon them. The men, who were
occupied procuring the means of a precarious subsistence, were not, as may be
readily imagined, of a lively disposition. Indeed, much gaiety of temper or a
high flow of spirits was altogether inconsistent with their surroundings. These
red men were, therefore, in general, grave even to sadness; had nothing of that
giddy vivacity peculiar to some nations of Europe, and they despised it. Though
usually silent and gloomy, their aged chiefs and the squaws were, on occasion,
fond of conversation, and amused the children with tales of war and hunting.
There were professional storytellers also among them, who imitated the actions
of their heroes, and thus increased the interest of their narratives and excited
the liveliest interest in their hearers. When tales of bloody rights, or the
incidents of buffalo hunts were recounted, the narrators imitating the actors in
the scenes, the audience listened with breathless attention. When they related
amusing stories, acting out the parts, the groups would break into wild shouts
of laughter and applause.
The diseases of the Indians were not numerous; their remedies few and simple,
their physic consisting mainly of the bark and roots of trees. For music they
used rude drums, rattles made of gourds, and a cane on which they piped. They
were hospitable, and grateful for benefits; brave, but wayward and inconstant.
To sum up their character in a few words: They were distinguished in council for
gravity and eloquence: in war, or bravery and address. When provoked to anger
they were sullen and retired, and when determined on revenge no danger would
deter them: neither absence nor time could cool them. If captured by an enemy,
they never asked life nor betrayed emotions of fear.
For over a hundred years after the settlement at Jamestown the colonists from
Virginia to Massachusetts were harassed by the Indians. The friendly relations,
which existed for a short time after the landing of the English, soon changed,
and the Indians became hostile and relentless in their enmity. During their wars
with the whites they practiced every possible cruelty, burnt their houses, shot
them down in their fields when at work, and now and again met them hand to hand
in battle. They were entirely unreliable, neither respecting in peace the faith
of treaties nor in war the dictates of humanity. They tortured their prisoners
to death, and some of the tribes notably, the Miami, ate the flesh of their
captives. War, if not brought on by an accidental reencounters, was preceded by
a formal declaration of hostilities. This was made with great ceremony. The
chief, having determined on fighting, sent wampum, or belts of beads, to his
allies, inviting them to come and destroy their enemies, and to the enemy a belt
painted red, or a bundle of bloody sticks, as a defiance. A great fire was then
lit and the war dance took place. These ceremonies observed, the braves issued
forth singing to the women a farewell hymn. If they surprised a village of their
foes, while the flower of the nation was absent, they massacred the women,
children and helpless old men, or made prisoners of such as had strength to be
useful to them. Their prisoners were treated with inconceivable barbarity, thus
exhibiting to what an extremity men's passions lead them when unrestrained by
reason and uninfluenced by the dictates of Christianity. These savage acts make
us more sensible, too, of the value of commerce, the arts of civilized life, and
the lights of literature, which, if they abate the force of some of the natural
virtues by the luxury which attends them, have taken out likewise the sting of
our natural vices and softened the ferocity of the human race. The Indians were
not without a certain species of government, which prevailed, with little
variation, over the continent. Though free, they did not despise all sorts of
authority. They were attentive to the voice of wisdom, which experience had
conferred on the aged, and they enlisted under the banners of their chiefs with
child-like confidence-chiefs in whose valor and military address they had
learned to repose their trust. His power, however, was rather persuasive than
coercive; he was reverenced as a father, rather than feared; is a monarch. He
had no guards, no prisons, no officers of justice; but, relying upon the
respect, confidence and esteem of his people, he lived unthreatened by Nihilist
cabals and unterrified by dynamite and infernal machines. Few modern European
rulers do this. The elders in every tribe constituted a kind of aristocracy, and
were always consulted on grave occasions by the chief and people. They possessed
no power except the influence they exerted by reason of their age and
experience, and the further fact that they constituted a kind of hereditary
nobility. Among the Indians age alone acquired respect, influence and authority,
because age brings experience, and experience is the chief source of knowledge
among a people without literature.
Their religious belief consisted of traditions mingled with many superstitions.
They believed in two Gods, the one Good, who was the superior, and whom they
styled the Great Spirit; the other Evil. They worshipped both, but principally
the latter, the Good Spirit, in their opinion, needing no prayers to induce him
to aid and protect his creatures. Besides these, they worshipped various other
deities, such as fire, water, thunder,-anything which they supposed to be
superior to themselves and capable of doing them injury. They believed in a
future state, in a tranquil and happy existence with their ancestors and
friends, spending their time in those exercises in which they delighted when on
earth. From the picturesque situations of their villages, they are supposed to
have admired the grand and beautiful in Nature. That they possessed to a
considerable degree the poetic sentiment is inferred from the names given to the
rivers and mountains, their war songs, and the speeches of some of their chiefs.
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History of Augusta County, Virginia By John Lewis Peyton, 1832