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Former Indian Population of Kentucky
It is known that, while the present area of Kentucky was, at the earliest
times, the theatre of severe Indian conflicts, stratagems, and bloody battles,
these efforts of fierce contending warriors were made by tribes, who, during all
the historical period of our information, crossed the Ohio from the West. The
fierce Shawnee and wily Delaware remained in the country but for short times.
They landed at secret points, as hunters and warriors, and had no permanent
residence within its boundaries. Such were the incessant bloody attacks and
depredations made by these and their kindred tribes, both prior and subsequent
to the American Revolution. The history of that State was, indeed, bathed in
blood, and sealed with the deaths of some of the noblest and freest of men.
At an early day, the head of the Kentucky River became a favorite and important
point of embarkation for Indians moving, in predatory or hunting bands, from the
South to the North and West. The Shawnees, after their great defeat by the
Cher-okees, took that route, and this people always considered themselves to
have claims to these attractive hunting-grounds, where the deer, the elk,
buffalo, and bear abounded ^-claims, indeed, whose only foundation was blood and
plunder.
The history of these events is rife with the highest degree of interest, but
cannot here be entered on. The following letter, from one of the early settlers
of the country, is given as showing the common tradition, that, while the area
of Kentucky was perpetually fought for, as a cherished part of the Indian
hunting-ground, it was not, in fact, permanently occupied by any tribe. The
writer s (Mr. Joseph Ficklin's) attention was but incidentally called to the
subject. His letter, which is in answer to a copy of our pamphlet of printed
inquiries, bears date at Lexington, 31st of August 1847.
"I have opened your circular addressed to Dr. Jarvis, agreeably to your request,
and beg leave to remark that I have myself an acquaintance with the Indian
history of this State from the year 1781, and that nothing is known here
connected with your inquiries, save the remains of early settlements too remote
to allow of any evidence of the character of the population, except that it must
have been nearly similar to that of the greater portion which once occupied the
rest of the States of the Union.
There is one fact favorable to this State, which belongs to few, if any, of the
sister States. We have not to answer, to any tribunal, for the crime of driving
off the Indian tribes, and possessing their lands. There were no Indians located
within our limits, on our taking possession of this country. A discontented
portion of the Shawnee tribe, from Virginia, broke off from the nation, which
removed to the Scioto country, in Ohio, about the year 1730, and formed a town,
known by the name of Lulbegrud, in what is now Clark County, about 30 miles east
of this place. This tribe left this country about 1750, and went to East
Tennessee, to the Cherokee nation. Soon after, they returned to Ohio, and joined
the rest of the nation, after spending a few years on the Ohio River, giving
name to Shawnee-town in the State of Illinois, a place of some note at this
time. This information is founded on the account of the Indians at the first
settlement of this State, and since confirmed by Black-hoof, a native of
Lulbegrud, who visited this country in 1816, and went on the spot, describing
the water-streams and hills in a manner to satisfy every body that he was
acquainted with the place.
"I claim no credit for this State in escaping the odium of driving off the
savages, because I hold that no people have any claim to a whole country for a
hunting or robbing residence, on the score of living, for a brief period, on a
small part of it. Our right to Northern Mexico, California, and Texas, is
preferable to any other nation, for the simple reason, that we alone subdue the
savages and robbers, and place it under a position which was intended by the
Creator of the world, as explained to the father of our race."
Archives Of
Aboriginal Knowledge
Archives Of Aboriginal
Knowledge, Henry R. Schoolcraft, 1860
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