|
Religion, Weapons, Ware Fare, Lodgings, Dress
of the Indians
Religion Of The Indians. Their
Weapons, And System of War Fare. Their Lodgings, Dress, Ornaments, Etc.
"Yet simple nature to his hope has given,
Behind the cloud-topped hill, an humbler
heaven;
Some safer world, in depths of wood
embraced,
Some happier island in the watery waste."
Pope.
The Indians, before
receiving instruction from Europeans,
generally believed in the existence of a
Supreme Deity, embodying a principle of
universal benevolence, and that to him their
gratitude was due for all natural benefits.
On the other hand, they stood in fear of a
spirit of evil, whose influence upon human
affairs they considered as being more direct
and familiar. To this being, known among
many tribes as Hobamocko, much more
assiduous devotion was paid than to the
Great Spirit, it being far more essential in
their view to deprecate the wrath of a
terrible enemy, than to seek the favor of
one already perfectly well disposed towards
his creatures. Besides these two superior
deities, a sort of fanciful mythology, not
unlike that of many ancient Eastern nations,
invested every notable object with its
tutelary divinity, and bestowed on each
individual his guardian spirit.
A general idea that the good would be
rewarded, and the bad punished, was
entertained. Far away to the warm
South-west, a pleasant land was fabled, in
which the hunter, after death, should pursue
his favorite employment, in the midst of
abundance, and a stranger for ever to want
or fear;
"Where everlasting Autumn lies On yellow
woods and sunny skies."
Their heaven was as far removed from the
sensual paradise of the Mahometans, as from
the pure abstractions of an enlightened
religion. Ease, comfort, and a sufficiency
for the natural wants, seemed all-sufficient
to these simple children of nature, to
render an eternity delightful.
The description handed down to us of the
Indian pow wows or conjurers, and their
medicine-men, derive an additional piquancy
and interest from the fact, that those who
detail them were generally as superstitious
as the poor natives themselves. We might
cite pages in which the necromantic
performances of the red men are spoken of
with all the pious horror that would
naturally be excited by what were considered
the direct operations of the devil, as
displayed in the works of his children.
Winslow, taking occasion to explain the
meaning of the word "Paniese," often applied
to notable warriors in New England, says,
"The Panieses are men of great courage and
wisdom, and to these also the devil
appeareth more familiarly than to others,
and, as we conceive, maketh covenant with
them to preserve them from death by wounds
with arrows, knives* hatchets, &c."
The works of the learned divine, Cotton
Mather, are filled with similar
extravagances.
These powwows, says Gookin, "are partly
wizards and witches, holding familiarity
with Satan, that evil one; and partly are
physicians, and make use, at least in show,
of herbs and roots for curing the sick and
diseased. These are sent for by the sick and
wounded; and by their diabolical spells,
mutterings, exorcisms, they seem to do
wonders. They use extraordinary strange
motions of their bodies, insomuch that they
sweat until they foam; and thus they
continue for some hours together, stroking
and hovering over the sick. These powwows
are reputed, and I conceive justly, to hold
familiarity with the devil."
Wherever the Indians have enjoyed free
intercourse with the whites, they have been
no less eager to adopt than apt to acquire
the use of their more efficacious weapons.
It is of the primitive instruments for
offence or defense that we shall now speak.
Scattered over the whole country, even at
the present day, small triangular bits of
wrought flint, quartz, or other stone are
turned up by the plough, or seen lying on
the surface of the ground. These
arrow-heads, with occasionally one of a
larger size, which might have served for a
lance, a stone tomahawk, a rude pestle, or
the fragment of a bowl of the same material,
constitute almost the only marks now
visible, in the thickly settled Eastern
states, of the race that formerly inhabited
them. The opening of a tomb sometimes brings
to light other relics, and various specimens
of native art have been preserved among us
from generation to generation, as curious
relics of antiquity; but until we arrive at
the Western tumuli, (commencing at the state
of New York) we find but slight impressions
upon soil at the hands of the red men, and
the few and simple articles to which we have
alluded, constitute the" most important
productions of their skill, except those
formed from a perish able material.
How the arrow and lance heads could have
been attached with any degree of firmness to
the wood, seems almost incomprehensible.
Captain Smith describes a species of glue
which assisted in accomplishing this object,
but the shank or portion of the stone that
entered the wood is in some of the specimens
so short and ill defined, that it seems
impossible that it should have been held
firm in its place by such means. The
arrow-heads were chipped into shape,
presenting something the same surface as a
gun-flint, while the tomahawks and pestles,
being of a less in tractable material, were
ground smooth, and some of them were highly
polished. A handle was commonly affixed to
the " torn-hog " or tomahawk by inserting it
in a split sapling, and waiting for the wood
to grow firmly around it; after which, it
was cut off at the requisite length.
The Indian bow was shorter than that
formerly used in England, and was so stiff
as .to require great strength or skill to
bend it. It became a much more effective
weapon after the introduction of steel or
iron arrowheads, which quickly superseded
those of stone. Clubs, sometimes armed with
flints, with the bow and tomahawk,
constitute the principal weapon of the race.
Daggers of flint or bone, and shields of
buffalo hide, were in use among some of the
Western tribes.
Divided into innumerable petty nations,
nearly the whole Indian population lived in
a state of insecurity, from the constant
hostility, which prevailed between different
tribes. So strong a clannish spirit as they
all exhibited has seldom been noticed in any
country, and the bitterest hatred was
inherited by every individual towards the
members of an unfriendly tribe. War, as in
most nations, whether barbarous or
enlightened, was ever esteemed the most
honor able employment. The manner in which
hostilities were conducted will appear by a
detail of some of the more noted Indian
wars, as given in the ensuing chapters of
this work. The whole was a system of
stratagem and surprise; a pitched battle in
an open field was almost unknown, and
greater honor was ascribed to the chief who,
by a night attack, destroyed his enemies at
a disadvantage, and brought away their
scalps in triumph, without loss to his own
people, than to deeds involving the greatest
personal exposure. The remorseless cruelty
with which women and children were destroyed
in the heat of conflict, has furnished a
theme for many a tale of horror.
Previous to a declaration of war against
another tribe, the chief men and councilors
of the nation were in the habit of holding
solemn consultations, accompanied by
numerous fantastic ceremonies. When fully
resolved upon hostilities, the first step
was to secure the assistance of as many of
the neighboring tribes as possible, for
which purpose ambassadors were sent, to set
forth the advantages of the union, and to
cement a treaty by exchange of wampum. When
all was ready, a hatchet or other weapon,
painted red, was sent as intimation to the
enemy of what was in store. We are told that
the reception of this ominous token
frequently excited such rage in the minds of
those to whom it was sent, " that in the
first transports of their fury, a small
party of them would issue forth, with out
waiting for permission from the elder
chiefs, and, slaying the first of the
offending nation they met, cut open the
body, and stick a hatchet, of the same kind
as that they had just received, into the
heart of their slaughtered foe."
When, weary with the war, either party
desired to terminate hostilities, the
message was sent under the protective
influence of the calumet, or pipe of peace,
which, like a flag of truce among other
nations, every where secured the person of
those who bore it. This pipe, so widely
celebrated, and of such universal use, was
most elaborately carved and bedecked. Each
nation had its own peculiar style of
ornament for this all-important symbol,
which was known to all the neighboring
tribes. A solemn and ceremonious smoking of
the calumet formed the token of ratification
to every treaty. When used at the conclusion
of a peace, the painted hatchet was buried
in the ground, and belts of wampum, so
figured and arranged as to commemorate the
essential articles of the pacific agreement,
were presented, to be kept as a perpetual
memorial.
The treatment of captives exhibited the
opposite extremes of cruelty and kindness.
Greatly to the credit of the race, it was
observed that, in most instances, white
women who fell into their hands met with no
outrage or indignity. They were generally
kindly treated, and every respect was paid
to their feelings. The men taken prisoners
of war, were either adopted to supply the
place of those who had fallen in battle, in
which case they were to undertake all the
responsibilities, and were entitled to all
the privileges of the one in whose place
they stood, or they were solemnly devoted to
death, by the most refined and cruel
torments that diabolical ingenuity could
devise.
On such occasions, all his native powers of
stoical endurance were called forth on the
part of the doomed warrior. When told what
was the fate before him, he would briefly
express his satisfaction; and when led to
the stake, and subjected to every torture,
by fire and mutilation, he would maintain a
proud composure, recounting his exploits,
and the injuries which he had inflicted upon
his tormentors in former battles, taunting
them with their unskilfulness in the art,
and describing the superior manner in which
he and his friends had tortured their
relatives. Not irnfrequently the rage of the
surrounding company would be so excited by
these expressions of contempt, and by their
in ability to break the warrior s spirit,
that some of them would rush upon him, and
dispatch him at once by a blow of the
tomahawk.
The habitations and clothing of the Indians
varied greatly with the temperature of the
climate. In the warm regions of the South, a
slight covering proved sufficient, while to
resist the severity of a New England winter
very efficient precautions were taken. The
usual manner of building their wigwams was
by fixing a row of poles firmly in the
ground, in the form of a circle, and then
bending and confining the tops together in
the centre. A hole was left for the smoke of
the fire to escape, at the top of the cabin;
every other part being warmly and closely
covered with matting. A tight screen hung
over the doorway, which was raised when any
one entered, and then allowed to fall into
its place.
A species of matting was prepared by peeling
the bark from trees, and subjecting it,
packed in layers, to a heavy pressure. With
this material, or with mats woven from
rushes, &c., the walls of the huts were so
closely thatched, as to effectually resist
wind and weather.
Some of these wigwams were of great size,
being from fifty to a hundred feet in
length, but the generality were of
dimensions suitable to a single family.
Their bedding consisted of mattresses
disposed in bunks attached to the walls, or
upon low movable couches. Bear and deerskins
furnished additional covering. Their other
furniture and household utensils were simple
in the extreme. Clay or earthen pots, wooden
platters, bowls and spoons, and pails
ingeniously fashioned of birch bark, served
their purpose for cookery and the table.
They were skilled in basket making.
In many of their towns and villages, the
wigwams were set in orderly rows, with an
open space or court near the centre; while
the whole was surrounded by a strong
palisade, having but one or two narrow
entrances. For spirited descriptions and
sketches of the modern Indian towns of the
extreme "West, the reader is referred to the
valuable works of Mr. George Catlin. In many
respects it will be perceived that old
customs are still observed.
The clothing of the Indians consisted mostly
of skins, dressed with no little skill.
Leggins of deer skins, with a hand s breath
of the material hanging loose at the side
seam, and often highly ornamented with
fringe and embroidery; moccasins of buck,
elk, or buffalo skin; and a garment of
various fashion, from a simple cincture
about the loins, to a warm and ornamental
mantle or coat, completed the equipment of
the men.
Very rarely, even in our own times, do we
find Indians who are willing to submit to
the restraining and inconvenient dress of
the whites. They have always been accustomed
to leave the thigh bare, and about the neck
they can endure none of the clumsy and
disagreeable bandages in such universal use
among civilized nations. "Those who wear
shirts," says Carver, " never make them
fast, either at the wrist or collar; this
would be a most insufferable confinement to
them."
The women wore a short frock, reaching to
the knees; their covering for the legs and
feet were similar to that worn by the men.
In some portions of the country, very
beautiful specimens of ornamental mantles,
covered with neatly arranged feathers, were
seen and described by early writers. Colored
porcupine quills were in general use, both
for stitching and ornamenting the clothing
and other equipments of the Indian.
A fondness for gay colors and gaudy
ornaments has ever been conspicuous in the
whole race. From pocone and other roots, a
brilliant red paint or dye was prepared,
with which, and with other pigments as
charcoal, earths, and extracts from the
barks of certain trees they painted their
bodies, in different styles, either to make
a terrible impression on their enemies, or
simply to bedeck them selves in a becoming
manner in the eyes of their friends. The
usual savage custom of wearing pendants at
the ears was common. The cartilage was
frequently stretched and enlarged by
weights, and by winding it with brass wire,
until it nearly reached the shoulder.
Tattooing was practiced by some nations, but
not so systematically, or to so great an
extent as has been observed among the
savages of warmer climates, where little
clothing is worn.
One of the most noted species of ornament,
which answered all the purpose of a
circulating medium among the Eastern
Indians, was wampum. This consisted of small
circular bits of seashell, smoothly ground
and polished, with a hole drilled through
the centre of each, by which it might be
strung, or attached ornamentally to the belt
or other parts of the dress. The " qua-hog "
or round clam furnished the principal
material for this coin, the variegated
purple portions of the shell being much the
most valuable. The great labor in preparing
it was the boring, which was effected by a
sharp flint. "When we consider the slow
nature of such a process, we can scarce
credit the accounts given of the immense
quantities of wampum that were procured by
the white colonists, while it retained its
value, in exchange for European commodities,
or which were exacted as tribute, in
atonement for national offences.
"The wompompeague," says Gookin, " is made
principally by the Block Islanders and Long
Island Indians. Upon the sandy flats and
shores of those coasts the wilk shells are
found. With this wompompeague they pay
tribute, redeem captives, satisfy for
murders and other wrongs, purchase peace
with their potent neighbors, as occasion
requires; in a word, it answers all
occasions with them, as gold and silver doth
with us. They delight much in having and
using knives, combs, scissors, hatchets,
hoes, guns, needles, awls, looking-glasses,
and such like necessaries which they
purchase of the English and Dutch with their
peague, and then sell them their peltry for
their wompeague."
The principal articles of food used by the
aborigines of the present United States,
were the products of the chase, fish, beans,
some species of squashes and pumpkins, and
maize or Indian corn. Wild rice, growing in
rich, wet land in the interior of the
country, furnished a wholesome and easily
gathered supply of farinaceous food to the
tribes of the temperate portion of the
United States. Shellfish were a very
important addition to the resources of those
who dwelt near the seacoast, and in the
interior, various species of wild roots, and
certain nutritious bark supplied the failure
of the cultivated crop, and furnished the
means to eke out a subsistence when the hunt
was unsuccessful or the last year s stores
had been consumed before the sea son of
harvest.
To effect a clearing, and to secure a crop
with such rude implements of stone as they
possessed, appears to us almost an
impracticable undertaking; but we are
assured, by early writers, that they
obtained as large a yield from a given spot
of ground as can be produced by the
assistance of all modern conveniences and
contrivances. Two dishes, greatly in vogue
among the Indians, have maintained their
popularity among their European successors.
Green corn, the ripening of which was
celebrated by a national dance, is sought as
eagerly as when it supplied a grateful
refreshment to the red men, emaciated, as
Smith describes them, by the spring diet of
fish and roots. A preparation, de nominated
"Succotash," consisting of maize, boiled
with beans, and flavored with fat bear's
meat, or fish, still remains (with the
substitution of pork for wild meats) a
favorite dish in New England. Carver says
that, as prepared by the natives, it was
"beyond comparison delicious."
It is singular that the use of milk should
have been entirely unknown before the advent
of the whites, although there were various
animals in the country from which it might
have been procured. This fact has been
adduced as a strong argument against the
hypothesis that immigrants from the nomadic
tribes of Tartary have mingled with the red
race in comparatively modern times. If the
ferocity or wildness of the buffalo, deer,
or elk, had at first seemed to render their
domestication impracticable, yet it is not
probable that so important an article of
subsistence would have been not only
disused, but entirely forgotten, until many
generations had passed away.
With the foregoing brief sketch of some of
the more marked Indian traits and
peculiarities, we will dismiss this portion
of our subject; and, dealing no more in
generalities, proceed to take up the history
of various tribes and nations, somewhat in
the order of the dates of their first
intercourse with Europeans. We need make no
apology for the omission of many minor
clans, or for avoiding that particularity,
in the delineation of private character,
which belongs rather to biography than to
general history.
Indian Races of
North and South America
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 .
Indian Races of North and South America, By Charles De Wolf Brownell, 1865
Free
Genealogy |
Indian
Genealogy |
Indian Races of North and South America
|
|