Ohio History Journal

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THE MIAMI COUNTRY, 1750-1815

THE MIAMI COUNTRY, 1750-1815

AS DESCRIBED IN JOURNALS AND LETTERS

by ELIZABETH FARIES

Senior Assistant, Reference and Catalog Department,

Dayton Public Library

During the late 1700's and the early 1800's the "Miami

Country" was a definite geographic area in the Northwest Territory.

This area has been defined as a region of approximately 5,000

square miles in southwestern Ohio, with a small adjoining "wedge

of southeastern Indiana." It was particularly the land that forms

the valleys of the Great Miami and the Little Miami rivers and

their tributaries, an area extending more than 100 miles inland

from a fifty-mile base along the Ohio River.1

In common with the Ohio Country, of which it was a part, it

is believed that the Miami Country was first visited by white men

when La Salle and his company made their trip down the Ohio

River in 1669-1670. Spurred on by a lucrative fur trade with the

Dutch, and later with the English, the Iroquois for many years con-

trolled the Ohio Country, using the Ohio River as a road to battle

in their war with the western tribes. During these years and, in

fact, until the end of the American Revolution, while the French

and the English contended for control of these western lands, the

area was visited only by fur traders, by soldiers on expeditions

against the Indians and the enemy nation, and by hunters who pre-

ferred lonely cabins in the great forests to the more settled areas

of the East.

As these visitors passed back and forth along the rivers and

over the Indian trails, their advance in knowledge of the country

is shown in the maps that were issued, first in France and then in

England. The first maps were crude and inaccurate on many points,

but in 1747 a map was sent out from London that "showed in

1 Pierce Beaver, "Miami Purchase of John Cleve Symmes," in Ohio State

Archaeological and Historical Quarterly, XL (1931), 284; Frank P. Goodwin, "Building

a Commercial System," in ibid., XVI (1907), 316.

48

VIEW   ON THE GREAT MIAMI

"The view is on the Great Miami from the resi-

dence of Captain Doyle, and lies two miles and

a half south of Dayton. Ohio." The picture was

painted by Godfrey N. Frankenstein.    From  a

print in the Ladies Repository (Cincinnati), VIII

(1848), obtained through the courtesy of the

Dayton Public Library.