Ohio History Journal

  • 1
  •  
  • 2
  •  
  • 3
  •  
  • 4
  •  
  • 5
  •  
  • 6
  •  
  • 7
  •  
  • 8
  •  
  • 9
  •  
  • 10
  •  
  • 11
  •  
  • 12
  •  
  • 13
  •  
  • 14
  •  
  • 15
  •  
  • 16
  •  
  • 17
  •  
  • 18
  •  
  • 19
  •  
  • 20
  •  
  • 21
  •  
  • 22
  •  
  • 23
  •  
  • 24
  •  
  • 25
  •  
  • 26
  •  
  • 27
  •  
  • 28
  •  
  • 29
  •  
  • 30
  •  
  • 31
  •  
  • 32
  •  
  • 33
  •  
  • 34
  •  
  • 35
  •  
  • 36
  •  
  • 37
  •  
  • 38
  •  
  • 39
  •  
  • 40
  •  
  • 41
  •  
  • 42
  •  
  • 43
  •  
  • 44
  •  
  • 45
  •  
  • 46
  •  
  • 47
  •  
  • 48
  •  
  • 49
  •  
  • 50
  •  
  • 51
  •  
  • 52
  •  
  • 53
  •  
  • 54
  •  
  • 55
  •  
  • 56
  •  
  • 57
  •  
  • 58
  •  
  • 59
  •  
  • 60
  •  
  • 61
  •  
  • 62
  •  
  • 63
  •  
  • 64
  •  
  • 65
  •  
  • 66
  •  
  • 67
  •  
  • 68
  •  
  • 69
  •  
  • 70
  •  
  • 71
  •  
  • 72
  •  
  • 73
  •  
  • 74
  •  
  • 75
  •  
  • 76
  •  
  • 77
  •  
  • 78
  •  
  • 79
  •  
  • 80
  •  

TECUMSEH, THE SHAWNEE CHIEF

TECUMSEH, THE SHAWNEE CHIEF.

 

 

E. O. RANDALL.

Among the savage races of history, no one is more extra-

ordinary, unique or fascinating in character and custom, in action

and achievement than the aborigine who roamed the forests of

North America before and at the arrival of the European dis-

coverers and settlers. Then roved the Indian

 

As free as nature first made man

Ere the base laws of servitude began,

When wild in woods the noble savage ran.

 

In these people, so peculiar and picturesque, were singularly

mingled the elements of the human and the brute, the crudity

and barbarity of the primeval crea-

ture; the majesty, nobility and lofty

sentiment of the enlightened man.

These primitive people had their lead-

ers, their sagacious sachems, their

chosen chiefs; their mighty men in

war, politics and religion, their patri-

ots and martyrs and they may boast of

heroes that might excite the envy of

any age or nation. Whence and when

came these children of the forest to the

valleys, plains and uplands of Amer-

ica it is not given to the historian to

recount, hardly even to the speculator

to guess. The definite knowledge of

the Red race dates back scarcely beyond his discovery by the

famous Genoese sailor who mistook him to be the inhabitant of

the distant India of which he was in search, and therefore called

him the "Indian." Four centuries of study and research leave the

origin of the Indian as great a mystery as when first encoun-

(418)