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Population and Statistics
The aboriginal population of America was
over-rated from the beginning; and the same
spirit of exaggeration which actuated the
early discoverers, has continued to throw
its influence over every period of our
history. It is not probable that, at the
opening of the sixteenth century, or any
other period which may be selected, the
number of souls upon the Indian territory,
bore any very considerable ratio to the
number of square miles of country which they
occupied in the shape of villages, or
hunting grounds. The hunter state requires,
indeed, that immense districts of forest
should be left in the wilderness condition,
that its objects may be properly
accomplished. From some data that have been
employed, it is doubtful whether an area of
less than fifty thousand acres, left in the
forest state, is more than sufficient to
sustain by the chase a single hunter.
Most of the tribes living in districts where
game abounded, relied almost exclusively
upon that resource for a subsistence. The
zea maize was cultivated in all the southern
and middle latitudes of the territory of the
United States, not as furnishing the staple
of life, but as a mere subsidiary means of
subsistence. This can be said of the ancient
Floridians, amongst whom De Soto marched,
and will hold good, if the remark be applied
to the Muskogees, the Choctaws and
Chickasaws, and the Cherokees, of the
earlier periods of our history.
The common deer was found to inhabit all the
latitudes from the Gulf of Mexico to the
shores of the Great Lakes. The black bear
extended its ranges to an equal extent. The
elk (C. Canadensis) was an inhabitant of the
North Atlantic forests, and was found by the
hunter west of the Alleghanies, and as far
south as the forests of Louisiana and the
prairies of Texas.
The moose (C. Alces) was killed in
Pennsylvania, and characterized the forests
of New England and the entire range of the
Lake States. To these animals, which
furnished the common viands of an Indian s
lodge, were added, for all the region west
of the Alleghanies, the bison of the west,
(Bos Americanus,) the prominent object and
glory of the chase for the tribes of these
latitudes. For these prime objects of prey,
the Indian disputed with the wolf, the
northern cougar, or panther, and the
northern hyena.
If, with the ample means and sparse
population of the continent, the Indian had
devoted himself to the arts of peace, the
aboriginal population would undoubtedly have
far transcended any modern estimates that
have been submitted. But the reverse was
singularly true; and, while he maintained an
active war on the native quadrupeds, this
struggle was but secondary compared to his
incessant, blood-thirsty, and perfidious war
against his own species. Every element of
tribal discord was there in active
operation, long before the continent was
discovered; and it is inferable that the
population barely sustained itself, but did
not advance, for centuries.
The Iroquois, who appear to have perceived
this cause of depopulation, and adopted the
principles of a confederacy, reaped the
highest advantages from it, and, in a
comparatively few years, extended the terror
of their name from New York and New England,
throughout all New France, quite to the
shores of the Gulf of Mexico.
The discovery of America, and the planting
of the colonies, put a new phasis on all
this. By the introduction of firearms, and
by creating a market for furs, the real
objects of the chase were entirely changed.
Hunting was altered from a manly pastime to
a money making pursuit. The beaver, otter,
mink, musk-rat, and other small animals,
which had before-time been sufficient for
their food and clothing, acquired a sudden
value, and the Indian s appetites were
stimulated by every possible inducement of
foreign production, to exert all his powers
in the chase. The consequence was, that
large tracts of land were soon exhausted,
and remote forests invaded. The countries in
which game failed became of little use to
them, and were easily parted with for the
means of gratifying their newly awakened
passions, and they retired farther into the
wilderness. The Anglo-Saxon trod closely on
their heels, following with the plough the
circle before gleaned with the rifle, the
gun, and the trap.
Amongst the inducements furnished the
Indian, to urge him on in the chase of the
furred animals, nothing has been so
deleterious as the introduction of distilled
spirits. A taste for this was soon created,
and it has spread far and wide. Years have
only confirmed the general habit. It has
paralyzed his powers as a hunter, and done
more than all other causes put together, to
produce depopulation.
Another cause, which has but recently been
demonstrated, though long suspected, is the
payment of cash annuities to tribes per
capita, or otherwise. The necessary result
of the sale of their lands, of which the
quantity held becomes excessive in their
hands, by the failure of the chase upon
them, is the accumulation of large sums,
which it is customary, in general, to pay in
the form of annuities. This custom is
universal, it is believed, in our
intercourse with the non-industrial or
hunter tribes.
Reference to the following tables of
statistics denotes that the hunter tribes,
who rely, largely, on these cash annuities,
become careless in their ordinary pursuit of
the chase. The temptation to idleness is too
strong for resistance in the Indian mind.
While the use of the trap is neglected, debt
is incurred for the means of clothing and
subsistence. It is not to be expected that
the ordinary principles of commerce will be
intermitted in the intercourse of our
frontier citizens with those moneyed tribes.
Credit will follow, as in ordinary cases,
the known means and disposition of payment.
The Indian is a man who, whatever may be his
idiosyncrasies, is prompt to acknowledge his
obligations to discharge his debts, tribal
and personal, and who is ever ready, when
his means will permit it, to cancel them:
this is characteristic of the moral sense of
the tribes. No man, who has had
opportunities of frequent observation of
their character and customs, will, it is
apprehended, deny this noble trait of tribal
honesty and fair dealing. The history of our
Indian treaties is a standing commentary
upon its truth, in every age of our
republic.
That these hunter tribes should not perceive
that the annual distribution of the
principal of their funds, instead of the
interest of it alone, is certain, in all the
cases of limited annuities, to deprive them,
in a few years, of every agricultural and
educational means of improvement, should not
excite surprise. They have not yet reached a
point of civilization from which they can,
calmly and truly, estimate their position.
They are, at the same time, urged to
continue the system by considerations of
sell-gratification, which it is not easy for
them to resist.
It will be further perceived, that those
tribes whom we are to regard, if not in the
mass, yet in their chieftaincies,
governments, and leading men, as
semi-civilized, have developed better fiscal
abilities, while, in many instances, the
principles of investment and funding,
adopted by them, are replete with the best
axioms of political economy.
While the hunter and barbarous tribes thus
persist in a policy which must be fatal to
their financial prosperity, it is a question
of moment, whether the ready means thus
supplied to them of self-indulgence, in the
use of distilled spirits, is not hurrying
them onward in a career that must end in
their moral wreck. It is seen, from the
inquiries that have been thus far made, that
small tribes, who, but a few years ago, were
prosperous, and had kept up, if not
increased, from the era of 1814, in their
numbers, have, under the influence of high
cash annuities, and unlimited credit, been
hurried on in the triple career of
intemperance, depopulation, and moral
degradation. Such, indeed, is their fearful
progress in this course, that a few years
must result in the entire extinction of some
well-known tribes. Nations who were, but a
few years back, fearful in their native
strength, under the banners of a Tecumseh, a
Little Turtle, and a Black Hawk, have fallen
under influences more fatal to them than the
rifle, the sword, and the camp-fever. If the
Miamies, portions of the Sauks and Foxes,
and the Winnebagoes, could be persuaded of
the hasty and downward steps which they are
making in this descending moral scale, it is
believed that they would pause in their
alarming course of depopulation, and revert
to a healthier policy.
The statistics which are presented have been
wrung from the tribes. Conscious,
themselves, of a paucity in their industrial
means, and of a disregard of the soundest
maxims of civilized life, they have
resisted, if they have not often
misunderstood, the humane policy which
dictated the investigation. Instead of
thereby seeking to acquire means of laying a
tax on their property an idea preposterous
in itself, as none but citizens can, under
the constitution, be taxed, the inquiry
merely contemplated the acquisition of
information which might show their
condition, and would be of incalculable
value to Congress, in more perfectly
adapting its laws to it. I have, in a
preceding place, adverted to the
difficulties in the way of prosecuting the
statistical inquiries among the tribes; but
no obstacle is of sufficient weight to deter
from the effort; nor can there be a
reasonable doubt of ultimate and complete
success.
The field of investigation has been enlarged
by our recent acquisitions of territory on
our southern and western boundaries, of the
Indian tribes of which, we are comparatively
uninformed. But this adds another reason to
those previously existing, to sanction the
original plan of the census and statistics.
Whatever system may be adopted in relation
to the cash-annuities paid to the hunter
tribes, it is desirable that they should be
prevented from dissipating their funds on
objects not essential to their advance in
agriculture, arts, education, morals, and
Christianity.
The progress which has been made in the
aboriginal census and statistics, will be
seen by referring to the subjoined tables,
in which the facts have been carefully
digested. These returns relate exclusively
to tribes living east of the Rocky
Mountains. Respecting the extreme western
tribes situated within the chartered limits
of Oregon, the latest official dates
received denote fifty-nine tribes, and
fragments of tribes, bearing specific names;
of which number thirty-four tribes live
south, and twenty-five tribes north of the
Columbia River. (See Tables, No. 4.) The
entire Indian population of this territory
is now estimated at 22,033, where Lewis and
Clark in 1806 reported 80,000. A great
number of dialects are spoken. The constant
tendency of the savage and hunter state, as
observed in the west, is to make dialects,
and to generate petty independencies. Even
the Cherokees, Choctaws, and other
semi-civilized tribes, resist confederation.
Change of accent, and peculiarities of
intonation, are perpetual and rapid causes
of mutations in their languages.
Mr. Hale, the ethnographer of the United
States Exploring Expedition, reports four
divisions of Indian population by
geographical boundaries, spreading along the
Pacific coast, between California and the
peninsula of Alasca, in north latitude 60°.
They are as follows:
1. North-west division. Latitude 52° 2', to
Charlotte s Sound and Alasca, 60°.
2. North Oregon division. All north of the
Columbia to latitude 52°, except Prince of
Wales Island, and three or four south.
3. South Oregon division. Sa-aptins,
Walla-wallas, &c.
4. California division. Darker shade
inferior physical type.
These divisions are not established
physiologically: the era being prior to the
settlement of the Oregon question, also
renders the divisions imprecise for civil
purposes. Division number one is wholly
without the limits of the United States. Of
division number two, extending north of the
Columbia to latitude fifty-two degrees,
three degrees of the coast have been
assigned to British Oregon, or New
Caledonia.
By dividing the American territory into
North and South Oregon, by the line of the
Columbia, as it has been done by Governor
Lane, the results of whose reports are given
in the statistical tables herewith, the
tribes are now accurately designated,
agreeably to our civil limits, as above
expressed. (See Tables No. 5.)
In order to group the Oregon Indians
agreeably to languages, our information is
inadequate. Mr. Hale subdivides the leading
coast divisions into thirteen sections; of
which the thirteenth section, being the
Blackfeet, or Satsika, comprises tribes who
dwell wholly eastward of the Rocky
Mountains, and are not, in any sense,
properly considered as Oregon Indians. This
section is redivided into Satsika, Blood
Indians, Piekans, and Atsinas, or Fall
Indians, who, speaking one generic language,
(the Atsina-Algonquin,) constitute the chief
known local divisions of the people. They
dwell on the Saskatchiwine, of the Great
Lake Winnipec, of Hudson s Bay, and on the
Upper Missouri, and its higher northeastern
tributaries. They are found by their
vocabulary, according to Mr. Mackenzie, to
speak a dialect, much altered, of the
Algonquin. It is certain that important
portions of this tribe hunt the plains south
of latitude 49°, and are therefore within
the United States.
The Shoshonees who occupy the upper waters
of the Lewis or Snake River, spread
throughout the Great Salt Lake Basin, and
cross the mountains south into Texas.
The Unikwa, the Contamis, or Flat-Bows, and
the Salish families, (sections 1, 2, 3, of
Mr. Hale,) are located wholly (or with the
exception of g, h, j, k, 1, of the latter)
north of the boundaries of Oregon.
Abstracting these families from the sections
enumerated, we have pretty fully eight
sections of tribes or families, estimated by
him; or, agreeably to the late official
statements of Governor Lane, fifty-nine
local tribes, numbering 22,000 souls, as the
subject of our future investigations in
Oregon.
Archives Of
Aboriginal Knowledge
Archives Of Aboriginal
Knowledge, Henry R. Schoolcraft, 1860
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