Ohio History Journal




SQUAW TRAIL

SQUAW TRAIL

 

 

BY GEORGE NELSON HINDS

 

 

John and Elizabeth Hinds and their three sons had emigrated from

the Fen country in England to the New World, on board a slave ship,

arriving in 1808. Traveling in an oilskin-covered wagon, drawn by their

oxen, Thomas and Jeremiah, they encamped at a point about thirty miles

from Albany, New York, on the Squaw Trail. This trail, variously labeled

"the Iroquois trail," "King Philip's road," and described as "a tote road"

and "a trace," was known to the Indians as Squaw Trail, because it was

sufficiently wide for squaws to move tribal belongings by means of ponies

dragging their burdens on tote poles. It is now for most of its course

designated as U. S. Highway No. 20, and little does the modern traveler

realize its antiquity, for it is thought by some to have existed before the

days af Babylon.

Frontier conditions and pioneer travel have been described time and

time again, so, although it is no easy matter for the modern reader to pic-

ture the scene which was presented to this venturing party, it is yet possible

to gain some conception of the hardships and dangers they were enduring.

The Hinds were bound for a cabin in the heart of the Ohio wilderness,

in the valley of the Whetstone (Olentangy), several hundred miles west-

ward, near where Squaw Trail merged into the Indian war trail. This

cabin, built by John's brother, Robert, in 1779, had been empty from the

time of the burning of Colonel William Crawford by the Delawares. John

had chosen the long route over Squaw Trail, avoiding the Great Way

through Fort Pitt, because of warnings against the character of many of the

white travelers on that road.

As they had been about to break camp to continue along the trail, they

were agreeably surprised when they were joined by another westward-bound

pioneer, Yacob Schneider, a German, late of the British Army, surrendered

by Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown. He had been a German soldier, sold by

his Hessian overlord into the English ranks, and had chosen to remain in

America after the Revolution. Since then he had been living in the wilds

among the tribesmen, learning how the primitive peoples survive. He was,

therefore, a most useful member of the Hinds party, and the friendship

which therewith began continued throughout their lives.

Yacob was delighted to observe in John's outfit two casks of refined

salt and a small copper still. These he watched over with the same care

(78)



HINDS: SQUAW TRAIL 79

HINDS: SQUAW TRAIL                     79

 

that Elizabeth bestowed on her sons, for salt in the wilderness was a luxury

and a still was a precious possession. Yacob taught the Englishmen the

tribal arts in setting snares, how each tribe marked its set by the form of

slip-noose employed and the way the spring poles were tied in place. He

explained why the Indians found the white man's traps impractical and why

the rifle was of little advantage in the wilderness.

A few miles from the camp site of the morning the party came upon

a minor Mohawk village. Many of the members of this tribe had been

driven into the Grand River Valley in Canada, but a few remained despite

the hatred of the colonists. John recorded in his diary that his first im-

pression on entering the village was that of a child turning the first page of

a picture book. These children of the wild were friendly in the extreme.

Even the dogs showed a disposition to come more than half way in es-

tablishing amicable relations with a white man. The day was excessively

hot and braves, squaws and children were scantily clad. John noticed that

all were wearing armlets, leglets and anklets of shells and bright beads

worked into ornamental patterns, and he knew their purpose for he had been

in tropical countries and found the natives using the same device to pre-

vent snake bites. The sparkling ornament would attract and receive the

strike of the viper instead of the flesh. As he moved about among the

wigwams and huts he was met with many grunts of approval and a young

Mohawk maiden approached him in a greeting that carried him back in

memory to Asiatic seacoast cities, which he had visited as a seaman in His

Majesty's service. The approach was as familiar as it had been among

people of the Buddhist faith.

The girl stood erect and perfectly poised before him. The posture he

learned later was the result of flattening the spine while an infant by a

special Mohawk binding which no other tribe save the Apache used. Her

left hand shielded her eyes as though from a blinding light and with her

right hand she made the sign of the cross, not as it is given by those of the

Roman Catholic faith, but low down with the same movement of the hand

as that of a Japanese in committing harakiri. John knew at once that while

the salute was for him it was also a tribute to his mother for delivering such

a glorious son to her presence that he blinded her eyes. The greeting was

answered by placing both hands over the eyes and keeping them there in

recognition of the light of her presence until the girl stamped the earth with

her right foot. John wondered, and with good reason, whence the Mohawks

brought this ancient greeting by maidens. The girl also wore a totem of

her tribe, a white pennant painted on her left cheek. The right cheek was

bare, indicating that she was pure of heart, of good disposition and had no

enemies. In the case of the braves the right cheek carried a black pennant

with one of white on the left. They were pure of heart and motive with

their friends but black and terrible on the side of the sword arm to their

enemies. These totems reminded John of the black and white banners car-



80 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

80     OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

ried by the knights in the first crusades in the Holy Land, having a similar

interpretation. Thus were two astounding links with a distant past sug-

gested to the investigating mind.

The visiting youngsters romped with the tribal children and their

games carried them into harmony and familiarity with each other. At

length, little George, aged four, the youngest of the trio consisting of John,

Jr., Thomas and George, disappeared. His red hair and curly locks had

won the admiration of the young squaw mentioned and in her wigwam she

had redressed him in buckskin and moccasins, with his face bearing the

totems of the Mohawk warrior, his hair glorious in the headdress of a squaw

with the turkey feathers drooping. Quickly he ran to the wagon with his

linsey-woolsey garb under his arm and tossed it into the vehicle, fully de-

termined that only buckskins would meet his needs in the future. This led

to trouble in the morning, for he stoutly refused to surrender the outfit and

Yacob was obliged to trade five pounds of salt for it. Their troubles with

little George were not at an end for his mother soon found him in open

rebellion against face washings. The work of the young squaw must never

be washed off. This embarrassing situation continued until Yacob con-

vinced George that he was an expert in restoring the decorations with a

little deer fat and axle grease and life again became worth living for the

youngster.

Farther along the trail, near where Buffalo now stands, the party came

to a large Seneca village. Their entrance lacked ceremony, though the

Senecas received them with dignity. Unlike many tribal villages, there was

no eruption of dogs when they arrived. They were greeted by a tall medicine

man who remained silent while offering them lumps of maple sugar.

He wore the totem of his people on his left cheek, a crude outline of

a beaver in black, a figure symbolizing intelligence, industry and patience.

On his forehead two broad lines in red crossed each other, forming a cross

of equal length and breadth. This cross was the source of the Indian magic

of a combination of fours. To the initiated the cross gave the message that

this Seneca medicine man carried his wisdom, his faith in the spirits and his

errands of mercy to the four points of the compass, that the four winds

brought him whispered blessings from every quarter, that the abundance in

the mighty storehouse of the Great Spirit was open to his needs through

the productiveness of the four seasons and the devils of disease feared him

because of his rulership in the kingdoms of fire, water, roots and herbs.

Yacob then boldly asked for Red Jacket, the famous Seneca chief.

When he appeared, Yacob thrust his hand into his bosom and produced a

piece of fabric that not only won him the confidence of the chief at once

but caused the party to be welcomed in a meaningful way. Yacob placed on

his own head the red lining from one of the great hats he had worn as a

British soldier. It was brocaded with the emblem of the crown, and the

action was like one veteran showing another the evidence of his service.



HINDS: SQUAW TRAIL 81

HINDS: SQUAW TRAIL                     81

 

The party remained in the Seneca village two days, during which they were

drawn into closer communion with that powerful and fascinating force

begotten of the wilderness. John, who was ever on the alert for evidence

and information having a bearing on the forbears of the tribesmen, was

convinced that the Indian was merely a development in the chemistry of

blood derived from Asiatic and European sources. His eyes and ears were

finding proof of the theory in every tribal contact.

They learned that the Senecas had effective remedies against many

common diseases. It is said that all native American remedies appearing

in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia were first known and used by the Indian

medicine men. They discovered that the delicate yellow tinge given to the

buckskins worn by the Senecas was produced by boiling freshly tanned

skins in deer fat and yellow root, or Hydrastis. Injuries from claw or

fang inflicted through their clothing were noticed to heal satisfactorily.

Consequently yellow root was used during an epidemic of small-pox to paint

the bodies of sufferers, with remarkable results. Acting on the theory that

the devils of disease entered through the nostrils, a mixture of yellow root

and fat was applied, thus warding off head colds.

They learned that the Senecas invited communication from the spirits

by cutting the lobe of the left ear free from the head, leaving it dangling

and enlarged. This ear was decorated with colorful ornaments to attract

the spirits, and receive their whispers of advice and warning. The scalp-

lock was an invitation to the Great Spirit to lift them up into the Happy

Hunting Ground, which may possibly be a survival of a previous age when

they may have associated with the queued followers of Confucius.

Traveling on, they arrived after several days at a spot near the present

site of Erie, Pennsylvania, where they encountered a large party of Shawnee

Indians under the leadership of the Prophet, Tecumseh's brother, on a visit

to Red Jacket.

Yacob and the Hinds first noted horsemen who moved single file from

the west along the trail. With scarcely a glance or a sign of greeting, they

watered their ponies and refreshed themselves in an atmosphere that pro-

claimed the whites intruders and themselves owners of the domain. No

special offense was offered, but Yacob scented trouble. Boldly he left his

own campfire, and, with his left hand lifted in greeting, he moved among the

braves asking for the "big chief," who finally chose to make himself known.

Yacob had not before met him, but on the instant recognized the brawny

and insolent Shawnee as the Prophet. He was heavily jawed and buck-

toothed with a faint green cross sweating from his forehead in the heat of

the journey. These proclaimed him the medicine man, who, with his brother,

Tecumseh, was seeking to cause the war drums of every tribe from the St.

Lawrence to the Gulf of Mexico to beat in one last stand against the en-

croaching whites. The Prophet grunted his knowledge of the presence of a

guest and Yacob resorted to the strategy he had used in meeting Red Jacket.



82 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

82     OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

He produced the red lining from the hat he had worn as a soldier of the

British crown, and the effect was all Yacob could have wished.

The Prophet, his left cheek knife-etched and scarred with the symbol

of the turtle with head turned to the right, the totem of his tribe, and the

green cross of the Shawnee medicine man restored, became friendly after a

manner, showing the interest of the fox cajoling the hen into a feeling of

welcome and security. The Prophet despised white men, but he found it

convenient to use them at times. As a result of this meeting the medicine

man learned something that warmed his heart. His guests informed him

that another war between Great Britain and her former colonies was in-

evitable and approaching rapidly. It was his first glimpse of the coming

conflict of 1812 and fitted in perfectly with the drive to be made by the

federated tribes now being organized under the leadership of Tecumseh.

The Prophet was given the cause for war from the English point of view

as Yacob had learned it from John.

John found the Shawnees living in an environment to which they were

not properly adjusted. Their appearance, manners, totems, organization and

battle tactics were not those of woods Indians but could best be identified

with a people of the plains and hills, a people residing in the open.

It was well known to all tribes that the Shawnee forbears had in-

troduced into their warfare strategy the flying wedge, now so commonly

used by American schoolboys in their football games. It was also known

that the running of the gauntlet was another product of these tribesmen

brought from whence no man knew. It was not a measure of punishment

to be meted out to unfortunate captives; instead it was a test of manhood

and physical courage to show the pleasure of the Great Spirit in the preser-

vation of the life of the deserving. The man who ran the gauntlet upright

and manfully was not only given his liberty but was often richly rewarded

and honored by his captors. The case of McPherson at Fremont is an

example.

The flying wedge, it should not be forgotten, was used by the Shawnee

to cut the force of General Arthur St. Clair in twain at the Battle of the

Wabash, and the great Tecumseh was killed at the point of such a wedge

in the Battle of the Thames. This method of warfare would seem to be

related to that of Alexander the Great, who invented the flying wedge, and

among whose warriors the running of the gauntlet is said to have been a

custom. At least, so it seemed to John Hinds and Yacob Schneider. As the

little party moved westward it passed the site of Ashtabula and thence to

Cleveland, where a transient village of Cayugas had just elected a new

tribal chieftain, and days and nights of ceremony and revelry were in prog-

ress. The selection had been made in accord with a custom largely prevail-

ing among the woods Indians, the choice being given over largely to the

spirits, the voting tribesmen serving as worthy and conscientious representa-

tives of those who had passed into the glorious Regions of wisdom and



HINDS: SQUAW TRAIL 83

HINDS: SQUAW TRAIL                         83

 

power. When a mother wished her son to be a chief of his tribe she could,

at any time before his birth or until he was seven years of age, announce

the fact of her aspirations. With the announcement the child came under

the direct supervision of the tribal spirits and his development was watched

by all. Any unusual hint of power or intelligence was received with en-

thusiasm and when the voting time came every ballot was cast under spirit

direction, regardless of relationship or personal attachment to any candidate.

Here John recorded special interest in a half lance used by these

peoples in the killing of big game. It was a lance similar to those used in

Japan and by the wild horsemen under Genghis Khan. Made of ash, it was

as light as could be wished, and being as hard as bone it showed the ancient

tempering by the use of clay and fire. A brave's life always depended on

this weapon being substantial and it was a work of art in balance and

quality.

Squaw Trail turned south to Cuyahoga Falls, where the Delawares

under old Captain Pipe had found lodgment. The Delawares were one of

the four Turtle tribes. They designated themselves by the totem of the

turtle, knife-etched or painted on the left cheek with the head turned to

the left. Captain Pipe treated the visitors with cold indifference; his

experience with the whites had not inspired confidence in them.

Thomas and Jeremiah toiled patiently, drawing the great wagon over

the rock-strewn hills and the boggy dales where Squaw Trail wound its

primitive course. The present site of Akron was passed and the party

followed closely what is now the line of the Erie railway to the site of

present-day Mansfield. Thence they moved to Chesterville, where the trail

joined with the old Owl River Trail leading from Fort Pitt. In due time

the site of Mt. Gilead was reached. From there the journey was continued

through the present Denmark to a point one mile east of Claridon, bringing

the travelers to a fairly good high-ground road which turned to the north-

west because of swampy ground. Crossing of the Whetstone was made at

Douce's Ford, where the trail merged with "The Way of the Great Spirit,"

or Moccasin Trail, for a quarter of a mile north. A turn to the west and

they were less than a half mile from the end of the long trek to a home in

the Ohio country.

Yacob shouted and fired a charge from his brass-mounted Hessian

musket in celebration when the clearing came into sight, the clearing where

many years before, Robert, the elder brother of John, had toiled to prepare

them a home. Soon the massive oaken door of the cabin was forced open,

exposing to view a single room with dirt floor, and big fireplace where

faggots were quickly brought to prepare for the evening meal. The end

of the Squaw Trail had come for John and his family and their friend

Yacob. George, who was the grandfather of the writer, could recall these

events with clarity, and delighted most to tell of the event of their arrival.