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Notice of an Inscription in Antique
Characters, fund on a Tabular Stone
Notice Of An Inscription In
Antique Characters, Found On A Tabular Stone, Or Amulet,
In One Of The Western Tumuli Of, Probably, The Beginning Of The Sixteenth
Century.
The
discovery of an inscription in a large
tumulus near Wheeling, in Western Virginia,
gives an importance to the opening of that
mound which it would not other wise possess.
This archaeological discovery was made, as
Mr. Abelard Tomlinson the proprietor states,
(Vide Western Pioneer) on the sixteenth of
June 1838. The country had then been settled
fifty-seven years, and had been first
explored two years earlier. Mr. Jesse
Tomlinson, the original proprietor, and
uncle of Abelard, had carefully guarded it,
and prevented any excavations from being
made, or any of the forest trees, with which
it was covered, from being cut. He yielded,
at length, to the public curiosity to
explore its contents, when his nephew,
Abelard Tomlinson, entered into an
arrangement with some other persons to
execute the work on a fixed plan of
excavation. They ran a horizontal gallery
into its centre, and sunk a shaft from its
top to intersect this audit, as represented
in
Plate 12, Figure 1.
To penetrate
a tumulus of earth of three hundred and
thirty-three feet in circumference, and
seventy feet in height, (Plate 5, Figure 2,)
with an unbroken surface, bearing large
trees, was not a light work, and it appears
that the labor of several hands, for a
number of months, was required.1
The results, which have been recorded in the
pages of the American Pioneer, Volume 2d,
page 197, were the discovery of two rude
tombs containing skeletons, and a number of
beads, amulets, and shells; but nothing
indicative of an unusual civilization in the
builders of this tumulus, except the
inscription stone; even if the block-prints,
discoidal stones, syphons of steatite, and
watch-towers, hereafter to be noticed, be
thought to denote a higher state of wants
than the Indian tribes had, they were not
the wants of high civilization. Little or no
importance appears to have been attached to
the inscription for several years.
The men engaged in the work were no
archaeologists. It was supposed to be in
Indian characters, and they are called
"hieroglyphics" by Mr. Townsend, a writer
who described the opening of the mound in a
letter which was published in the Cincinnati
Chronicle, a weekly gazette, of February 2d,
1839. He also gave a drawing of the
inscription.2 A
copy of this paper was transmitted to me by
a friend. Having, at the same time, a copy
of Mr. March s Grammar of the Icelandic, of
1838, the appendix to which contains the
Runic alphabet, I observed some
corresponding characters. By reference to an
inscription from Dr. Plott's History of
Staffordshire, it was also seen that there
were several of the characters quite
identical with the ancient form of the
Celtic alphabet, as employed in Britain in
the, so called, Stick-Book. A copy of the
inscription (Townsend s copy) was
transmitted to Professor Rafn, at
Copenhagen, the distinguished Secretary of
the Royal Society of Northern Antiquaries.
Mr. Rafn does not find it to be Runic, but
is disposed to consider the inscription
Celtiberic. Memoires de la Societé Royale
des Antiquaries du Nwd, 18401843, p. 125.
Mr. Abelard B. Tomlinson states, in a letter
above referred to, that he commenced opening
the mound on the 19th of March, 1838; that
he wrought at the excavation himself; and
that he found the first or lower vault on
the 4th of April, and the second or upper
vault on the 16th of June of that year. That
the osseous remains of two human skeletons
in a state of decay, were found in the
first, one of which had six hundred and
fifty beads, and a small yoke-shaped
ornament or implement, with two
perforations; the other was without any
ornament whatever. That the upper vault
contained the remains of but one skeleton,
and a great number of trinkets, the chief of
which were seventeen hundred bone-beads,
five hundred sea-shells, one hundred and
fifty pieces of mica, five copper wrist and
arm bands, and a small flat stone, of which
he furnishes a facsimile, page 195, about
three eighths of an inch thick, with an
engraving.
Dr. Samuel George Morton, in his Crania
Americana, page 201, publishes extracts" of
a letter from Dr. James W. Clemens of
Wheeling, of the general date of 1838, in
which he describes the opening of the mound,
and the various objects discovered, without
mentioning the inscribed stone, unless it be
included in the general term, "together with
various articles of minor interest," page
222, Crania Americana. It is to be regretted
as an historical question, that the precise
date of this letter is not given. But little
interest appears to have been excited by the
"stone," and nobody, if we refer to the
first accounts, appears to have regarded it
as containing alphabetical characters.
Mr. Clemens falls into the popular error of
considering the beads as "ivory." They have
been found to be formed of seashells, (see
Transactions of the American Ethnological
Society, Vol. I.,) and agree in their shape
with the ancient wampum as disclosed in
Western New York and at Beverly in Canada.
He also states the cortical layers of the
large oak, which stood at the top of the
central part of the mound, at three hundred:
they are stated by Mr. Tomlinson at about
five hundred, (Am. Pioneer, page 199.) This
appears to be a point of some importance, as
by the latter statement, we have the date of
A. D. 1338, as the era of the abandonment of
the mound, and by the former, A. D. 1538, or
forty-six years after the discovery of the
country by Columbus.
De Leon discovered Florida in 1512.
From the collection of Terneau Campans, the
mouth of the Mississippi appears to have
been discovered in 1527. There would be no
inconsistency in supposing that some of the
followers of De Soto had carried a
Celtiberic inscription into the valley of
the Ohio.
Dr. Morton (Crania Am., Plate 53) gives a
figure of the cranium found in the upper
vault, from a drawing by Mr. Clemens, and
states its facial angle at 78. This cranium
has been recently drawn by Capt. S. Eastman,
U. S. A., from the original in the
possession of Dr. De Hass of Virginia, (See
Plate 38, Figure 6.) Its posterior
developments appear to be large, and
assimilate it to the Southern type of
crania.
M. Jomard, of Paris, (vide Seconde Note sur
une Pierre Gravée trouve dans un ancien
tumulus Americain,) is inclined to deem it
an inscription in the ancient Libyan
language. He had before him, however, but an
imperfect copy of the inscription, which was
transmitted in 1839, by Mr. Eugene Vail;
being the copy originally published in the
Cincinnati paper by Mr. Townsend, which had
misled others.
Dr. Wills De Hass, of Grave Creek, has
recently (1850) brought to Washington the
original stone, a facsimile of which is
given by Capt. S. Eastman, U. S. A. (Plate
38, Figure 1.) He has also copied its
reverse, (Figure 2.) These drawings
accurately correspond with the copy
published by the American Ethnological
Society in 1846. The same artist has also
copied the ancient Celtic inscription before
referred to, (Plate 38, Figure 3); also a
curious device, found in one of the minor
mounds at Grave Creek Flats (Figure 4); and
a circular stone, without inscription, but
identical in material with the inscription
stone, (Figure 5.) These facts will enable
the reader to form his own judgment in the
matter.
Grave Creek Flats appears to have been the
site of an ancient Indian town of
importance. Seven mounds, or their remains,
still existed upon these flats in 1844,
although the plough and the spade had done
much to obliterate the smaller ones. There
were also traces of a large circular work,
embracing a part of the public road leading
northeast to the hills. The relation of
these several objects is shown by
Plate 39.
After crossing this low ground, there were
also traces of a circumvallation on the more
elevated level grounds; and on rising the
hills to Parr s Point, there was still,
quite entire and undisturbed, the ruins of a
tower or look-out, upon a commanding point
of ground on the farm of Mr. Mitcheltree.
(See
Plate 39.)
This work had been commenced by excavating
the earth several feet, and walling it up
with rough stones, in the manner of a well.
From the quantity of fallen stones around
and within this excavation, this tower must
have been many feet above the ground. Every
one of the stones of which it is composed,
must have been carried up the acclivity for
nearly a mile; as the surface of the hills
consists entirely of loam and loose soil.
A corresponding work of a similar character
appears to have existed on the apex of the
hill which forms the opposite banks of the
Ohio River, in Belmont County; and a
defensive work of some extent exists on the
high grounds back of this apex, but
separated from it by a deep ravine. (See
Plate 39.)
To enable the reader to appreciate the
relative position of the great mound, and
the other objects of antiquarian interest in
its neighborhood, a plat of the entire
"flats" is introduced. (Plate 39.) There is
also added, a view of the Ohio River, taken
from the rude observatory which has been
constructed at the top of the great mound
looking to and across the Ohio, into Belmont
County. (Plate 75.)
Plate 29, Figures 1, 2, 3, 4, represent a
stone block-print and its reverse, found in
one of the minor mounds in the town of
Elizabethtown, on the superior plateau of
the Grave Creek Flats. This antique object
is analogous to a print of the same
character, found in a mound in Cincinnati.
(Plate 23, Fig. 5.)
Figures 5, and 6, Plate 29, denote porphyry
axes; perhaps another form of the fleshing
instrument, disclosed by the minor mounds of
the Grave Creek Group.
With regard to the inscription, it may be
said, if genuine, to be intrusive, and of
foreign origin. It has belonged to some
adventurer, or captive carried by the tribes
to this spot. Many contend, on what are
considered slight grounds, for a
comparatively high state of civilization in
the ancient inhabitants of the West, and
adduce their architectural ruins, and
attainments in fortification, as a proof of
it. But, granting whatever can be advanced
on this head, it would contradict all our
actual knowledge on this branch of American
archaeology, to admit the possession, by
them, at any period known to us, of an
alphabet of any kind. The characters
employed in picture writing by the Toltecs
and Aztecs, were symbolic and
representative, and they have left
irrefragable evidences of their high
proficiency in them: but nothing more. There
can be no pretence that any Indian race who
ever inhabited this valley possessed an
alphabetic art. The inscription of this
tumulus, if it be true, is foreign. The
question of its genuineness must rest on the
veracity of Mr. Tomlinson, and his neighbors
who have united in his statements. On the
score of it's being of Iberic origin, the
account of Dr. Clemens, who is the least
favorable to the antiquity of the mound,
opposes no bar to a foreign theory. Giving,
as his facts do, the date of 1538 puts it
twenty-six years after the discovery of
Florida by De Leon, and one year subsequent
to the discovery of the mouth of the
Mississippi by Narvaez. A stronger objection
is found in the inability of the Copenhagen
antiquarians to read it, while acknowledging
a large portion of its character to be in
the Spanish type of the Celtic. The
following characters are common, it will be
seen, to the inscription at Dighton Rock and
Grave Creek Mound, namely:
◊ X |3
A still greater amount of resemblance to it
appears in the "stick-book" character of the
ancient British Celtic. This is perceived in
the characters
◊ <|> ^
X X4 which are common to both
inscriptions, namely, the Celtic and the
Virginie. There would appear to be some
grounds here for the Welsh tradition of
Madoe.
We have thus three inscriptions, which
appear to have been made in the same mixed
character, or to have something in common.
Elements of an alphabet are seen which were
known to many nations of Western Europe, and
were originally derivative from the banks of
the Mediterranean, before the introduction
of the Roman alphabet.
1. We understand that the estate of Mr.
Jesse Tomlinson was charged with $2,500 for
this work.
2. This was subsequently
found to have been copied with some material
inaccuracies.
3. Best match with the
computer
4. Best match with the
computer
Archives Of
Aboriginal Knowledge
Archives Of Aboriginal
Knowledge, Henry R. Schoolcraft, 1860
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