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Earliest Indian Residents
The Indian, being without a literature,
knows nothing of his origin. The Frenchman
and Spaniard found him here, and learning
from him all he did know, gave the story to
civilization as an Indian legend, while
treating the newfound race historically as
they found it.
The Hurons, originally
the Wyandots, were at Quebec in 1534, when
Jagques Cartier arrived there. Later, they
formed an alliance with the Adirondacks, but
when the latter joined the Southern Iroquois
Confederacy (about 1580), the prestige of
the Wyandots began to fade, and the
dispersion of the tribe overall Canada to
Lake Huron followed. Early in the 16th
century, they, with some Mississaugas and
members of other tribes, formed a new
confederacy with villages along the Thames
and Lake and River St. Clair. In 1649, this
new branch of the tribe was dispersed by the
Southern Confederacy. The name originates in
the phrase Quelles Hures (What Heads),
applied by the French of Marquette's time on
first seeing them in their new western home.
During the winter of 1615-16, Champlain
visited among the tribes then inhabiting the
Peninsula, formed by Lake Erie and St. Clair
river. The country was then inhabited by a
tribe, to whom Champlain gave the name
Neutral Nation, or Nation de Truite; while
the whole country west was called Conchradum,
and after the Iroquois war, Saguinan. The
Hurons were, undoubtedly, a branch of the
great Algonquin race which, under several
names, owned Ontario from the Ottawa to Lake
Huron. To this Ontario division the general
title of Iroquois du Nord was given by the
French for military and political purposes.
After the great war of 1649, the Otchipwas
and Mississaugas moved from the South into
Canada, and the victorious Iroquois of the
South returned to their original homes.
The Mississaugas
are first named by the French in 1620. Prior
to the Revolution they moved from the Upper
Lake region and Minnesota to the country
east of the Georgian Bay, and in the Albany
(N. Y.) Council of 1746 they were taken into
the Iroquois Confederacy as the seventh
nation. Charlevoix speaks of them as having
villages at Niagara, on the La Tranchee and
on Lake St. Clair subsequent to 1649. They
were also known as Souters or Jumpers, and
at the close of the eighteenth century
seemed to be the sole aboriginal occupiers
of what now constitutes the Province of
Ontario.
Back in the beginning of the 15th century
the Mohawks, Oneidas, Cayugas, Onondagas,
and Senecas, inhabiting what is now the
States of New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio,
and roaming at will over adjacent territory,
entered into a treaty of friendship, under
the title "Five Nations;" and so, the
Iroquois, with a few changes, such as
ousting the Oneidas and taking the Aucguagas,
continued to live under this treaty for
nearly three hundred years, when, in 1712,
the Tuscaroras came from North Carolina to
join the confederacy, and were admitted as
the sixth nation, since which time the name
Six Nations has been applied, with the
exception of the short period, the
Mississaugas held a place in the Council.
Their powerful opponents were the Delawares,
Cherokees, Mohicans, Adirondacks and Hurons.
The latter's power was broken about 1647 by
the terrible Iroquois, while in 1653 the
Erie nation was almost wiped out of
existence by the fierce warriors. The
Iroquois on July 19, 1701, ceded to the
British all the following described tract:
"That vast tract of land or colony called
Canagaviavchio, beginning on the northwest
side of Cadavachqui (Ontario) Lake, and
includes all the land lying between the
great lake of Ottawa (Huron), and the lake
called by the natives Sahiquage, and by the
Christians the Lake of Sweege (Oswego for
Lake Erie), and runs till it butts upon the
Twichtwichs, and is bounded westward by the
Twichtwichs, on the eastward by a place
called Quadoge, containing in length about
800 miles, and breadth 400 miles, including
the country where beavers and all sorts of
wild game keep, and the place called
Tjeughsaghrondie, alias Fort De Tret, or
Wawyachttenock (Detroit), and so runs round
the Lake of Sweege till you come to a place
called Oniardarundaquat."
Indian Residents
This
site includes some historical materials that
may imply negative stereotypes reflecting
the culture or language of a particular
period or place. These items are presented
as part of the historical record and should
not be interpreted to mean that the
WebMasters in any way endorse the
stereotypes implied .
History of the County of Middlesex, Canada, 1889
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