He paddled eastward down the Great Lakes in the route of 
    the former migration of his tribe, till he entered into a large river, which 
    flowed in the direction of the rising sun. Undiscovered he passed through 
    the hostile tribes of the Naud-o-ways. At last when the river on which he 
    floated, had become wide and like a lake, he discovered on the banks, a hut, 
    made of logs, and he noticed the stumps of large trees which had been cut by 
    sharper instruments than the rude stone axes used by the Indians.
    The signs were apparently two winters old, but satisfied that 
    it was the work of the spirits, for whom he was in search, Ma-se-wa-pe-ga 
    proceeded on his journey, and he soon came to another hut and clearing, 
    which though deserted, had been built and occupied during the previous 
    winter. Much encouraged, he paddled on down stream till he discovered 
    another hut from the top of which arose a smoke. It was occupied by the 
    "white spirits," who, on his landing, cordially welcomed him with a shake of 
    the hand.
    When about to depart to return home, presents of a steel 
    axe, knife, beads, and a small strip of scarlet cloth were given him, which, 
    carefully depositing in his medicine bag, as sacred articles, he brought 
    safely home to his people at La Pointe. Ma-se-wa-pe-ga again collected the 
    principal men of his tribe in council, and displaying his curious presents, 
    he gave a full narrative of his successful journey and the fulfillment of 
    his dream. The following spring a large number of his people followed him on 
    his second visit to the supposed "white spirits." They carried with them 
    many skins of the beaver, and they returned home late in the fall with the 
    dread firearm, which was to give them power over their much feared enemies. 
    It is on this occasion also, that they first procured the firewater, which 
    was to prove the most dreadful scourge and curse of their race.
    It is related that on the arrival of this party at La 
    Pointe, with the firewater, none dare drink it, thinking it a poison, which 
    would immediately cause death. They, however, to test its virtues, made an 
    experimental trial on a very aged woman who--as they reasoned--had but a 
    short time to live at all events, and whose death would be a matter of no 
    account. The old woman drank it, appeared perfectly happy and in ecstasies, 
    got over the effects of it, and begged for more. On which the men took 
    courage, and drank up the remainder themselves. From that time, firewater 
    became the mammon of the Ojibways, and a journey of hundreds of miles to 
    procure a taste of it, was considered but as boys play.
    They tell, also, the effect of the first gun, which they 
    procured from the whites and introduced among the more remote and ignorant 
    Dakotas, with whom at this time they happened to be on terms of peace. A 
    peace party of the Ojibways visited a village of these people on the St. 
    Croix River, and took with them as a curiosity, the dreadful weapon they had 
    procured. While enjoying their peaceful games, the young men of the Ojibways 
    informed the Dakotas of the fearful and deadly effects of the gun; but they, 
    thinking that the Ojibways wished to intimidate them with an imaginary fear, 
    reviled and laughed at the instrument, and in their disbelief they even 
    offered to bet against its deadly effects. The dispute becoming high, the 
    bet was taken, and a Dakota brave in utter derision, insisted on offering 
    the back part of his body as a prominent mark. He was shot dead on the spot. 
    With difficulty the peace party succeeded in returning safely home, for the 
    wrath of the Dakotas was aroused at the death of their warrior, and the old 
    feud was again renewed, though from this time they evinced a mortal fear of 
    the gun, which their remoteness from the white strangers precluded them from 
    obtaining, till many years after the Ojibways had been fully supplied.
    About this time, the old men of the tribe date the sudden 
    evacuation of their town on the island of La Pointe, and the planting of 
    their lodges in the adjoining Bay of Shag-a-waum-ik-ong, which occurrence I 
    have fully mentioned in the preceding chapter. The first white men whom they 
    tell of having visited them, came after this dispersion, and while they were 
    congregated on the shores of the Bay.
    One clear morning in the early part of winter, soon after 
    the islands which are clustered in this portion of Lake Superior and known 
    as the Apostles, had been locked in ice, a party of young men of the 
    Ojibways started out from their village in the Bay of Shag-a-waum-ik-ong, to 
    go, as was customary, and spear fish through holes in the ice, between the 
    island of La Pointe and the main shore, this being considered as the best 
    ground for this mode of fishing. While engaged in their sport, they 
    discovered a smoke arising from a point of the adjacent island, toward its 
    eastern extremity.
    The island of La Pointe was then totally unfrequented, 
    from superstitious fears which had but a short time previous led to its 
    total evacuation by the tribe, and it was considered an act of the greatest 
    hardihood for any one to set foot on its shores. The young men returned home 
    at evening and reported the smoke which they had seen arising from the 
    island, and various were the conjectures of the old people respecting the 
    persons who would dare to build a fire on the spirit-haunted isle. They must 
    be strangers, and the young men were directed, should they again see the 
    smoke, to go and find out who made it.
    Early the next morning, again proceeding to their fishing 
    ground, the young men once more noticed the smoke arising from the eastern 
    end of the unfrequentedisland, and led on by curiosity, they ran thither and 
    found a small log cabin in which they discovered two white men in the last 
    stages of starvation. The young Ojibways filled with compassion carefully 
    conveyed them to their village, where, being nourished with great kindness, 
    their lives were preserved.
    These two white men had started from Quebec during the 
    summer with a supply of goods, to go and find the Ojibways who every year 
    had brought rich packs of beaver to the seacoast, notwithstanding that their 
    road was barred by numerous parties of the watchful and jealous Iroquois. 
    Coasting slowly up the southern shores of the Great Lake late in the fall, 
    they bad been driven by the ice on to the unfrequented island, and not 
    discovering the vicinity of the Indian village, they had been for some time 
    enduring the pangs of hunger. At the time they were found by the young 
    Indians, they had been reduced to the extremity of roasting and eating their 
    woolen cloth and blankets as the last means of sustaining life.
    Having come provided with goods they remained in the 
    village during the winter, exchanging their commodities for beaver skins. 
    The ensuing spring a large number of the Ojibways accompanied them on their 
    return home.
    From close inquiry, and judging from events, which are 
    said to have occurred about this period of time, I am disposed to believe 
    that this first visit by the whites took place about two hundred years ago. 
    It is, at any rate, certain that it happened a few years prior to the visit 
    of the "Black gowns" mentioned in Bancroft's History, and it is one hundred 
    and eighty-four years since this well-authenticated occurrence.
    If thorough inquiry were to be made, it would be found 
    that the idea which is now generally believed, that the pious missionaries 
    of those olden times, were the first pioneers into the Indian country about 
    the great chain of Lakes, and Upper Mississippi, and were only followed 
    closely by the traders, is a mistaken one. The adventurous, but obscure and 
    unlettered trader, was the first pioneer. He cared only for beaver skins, 
    and his ambition not leading him to secure the name of a first discoverer by 
    publishing his travels, this honor naturally fell to those who were as much 
    actuated by a thirst for fame, as by religious zeal.
    The glowing accounts given by these traders on their 
    return with their peltries to Quebec, their tales of large villages of 
    peaceable and docile tribes caused the eager Jesuit and Franciscan to 
    accompany him back to the scene of his glowing accounts, and to plant the 
    cross amongst the ignorant and simple children of the forest.
    In making these remarks, we do not wish to deteriorate 
    from the great praise, which is nevertheless due to these pious and 
    persevering fathers, who so early attempted to save the souls of the 
    benighted Indians.
    In the separation of the Ojibway tribe into two divisions, 
    upwards of three centuries ago at the outlet of Lake Superior, which has 
    been fully treated of in a previous chapter, a considerable band remained on 
    their ancient village site at Bow-e-ting or Falls of St. Marie; and here, 
    some years prior to the first visit of the white men and "Black Gowns" to 
    the greater village in the Bay of Shag-a-waum-ik-ong, traders and priests 
    had established themselves, and this circumstance naturally conduced to draw 
    thither from their more western and dangerously situated villages, many 
    families of this tribe, till they again numbered many wigwams, on this, the 
    site of their ancient town. It was the first discovery of this tribe, at 
    this point, which has given them the name, by the French, of Saulteaux, from 
    the circumstance of their residing at the "Falls."
    This band have ever since this period, remained detached 
    by the intervening southern shores of Lake Superior, from the main body of 
    the tribe who have radiated northward, westward and southward, from their 
    central town of La Pointe.
    Aided by the French, Ottawas, Potawatumies, and Wyandots, 
    they succeeded in checking the harassing incursions of the war-like 
    Iroquois, and as they became equally possessed of the fire-arm, instead of 
    being pressed westward, as they had been for centuries before, they retraced 
    the eastern track of their ancestors' former emigration, and rejoined the 
    remnants of their race who had been for many years cut off from them by the 
    intervening Iroquois, and who had first greeted the French strangers who 
    landed in the river St. Lawrence, and who termed them Algonquins.
    From this period, the communication between the eastern 
    section or rear of the Algic tribes, occupying the lower waters of the River 
    St. Lawrence, and the great western van who occupied the area of Lake 
    Superior, became comparatively free and open, for villages of the Algic 
    tribes lined the shores of the great chain of Lakes and also the banks of 
    the great river which forms the outlet into the "salt water."
    In one of their traditions it is stated that "when the 
    white man first came in sight of the 'Great Turtle' island of Mackinaw, they 
    beheld walking on the pebbly shores, a crane and a bear who received them 
    kindly, invited them to their wigwams, and placed food before them." This 
    allegory denotes that Ojibways of the Crane and Bear Totem families first 
    received the white strangers, and extended to them the hand of friendship 
    and rites of hospitality, and in remembrance of this occurrence they are 
    said to have been the favorite clans with the old French discoverers.
    
    
    go to chapter 8
    
    
    
    
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