Early the following spring, a large delegation
proceeded to Ste. Marie to attend the council, and hear the words of the
"Great King of the French." Ke-che-ne-zuh-yauh, head chief of the great
Crane family, headed this party, and represented the nation of the Ojibways.
It is his descendants in the fourth generation, from whom I have obtained
the few detached items, which are here given respecting this important
event.Michel Cadotte (son of the Mons. M. Cadotte
whom we have already had occasion to mention), who is now the oldest man of
mixed Ojibway and French blood in the northwest, states that his
great-grandfather, a Mons. Cadeau, on this occasion first came into the
Ojibway country in the train of the French envoy Sieur du Lusson. The name
has since been spelled Cadotte, and the wide spread family of this name
claims their connection with the Ojibway tribe from this period. From this
old half-breed, still living at La Pointe, I have obtained much reliable
information, corroborating with that obtained from the Indians themselves.
The envoy of the French king asked, in the name of his
nation, for permission to trade in the country, and for free passage to and
from their villages all times thereafter. He asked that the fires of the
French and Ojibway nations might be made one, and everlasting. (For a notice
of Jean Baptiste Cadotte, married in 1756, see an article in this volume.)
He promised the protection of the great French nation
against all their enemies, and addressing himself to the Chippeway chieftain
from La Pointe, he said:--
"Every morning you will look towards the rising of the sun and you shall see
the fire of your French father reflecting towards you, to warm you and your
people. If you are in trouble, you, the Crane, must arise in the skies and
cry with your 'far sounding' voice, and I will hear you. The fire of your
French father shall last forever, and warm his children." At the end of this
address a gold medal shaped like a heart was placed on the breast of
Ke-che-ne-zuh-yauh, and by this mark of honor he was recognized as the chief
of the Lake Superior Ojibways. These words have been handed down from
generation to generation, to his present descendants, and it will be readily
seen by them that the French had already learned to use the figurative and
forcible style of expression of the Ojibways, and understood their division
into Totemic clans, with the peculiarities on which each clan prided
themselves. (Note by Mr. Warren.--On the death of this chieftain, this gold
medal was buried with him, through a superstitious notion that he should
appear in the land of spirits with the same honors which had attended him on
earth. His grave was located on the shores of Shag-a-waum-ik-ong Bay. In
1850 it was carefully searched for by some of his descendants to recover the
medal, but the grave was found to have been swept away by high water. )
The Ojibways received the "heart" of their French
brethren, and accepted their proposals of peace, amity, and mutual support
and protection. From this period their country became more free and open to
French enterprise, and they learned to term the French king "father."
The Ojibways learned to love the French people, for the
Frenchmen, possessing a character of great plasticity, easily assimilated
themselves to the customs and mode of life of their red brethren. They
respected their religious rites and ceremonies, and they "never laughed" at
their superstitious beliefs and ignorance. They fully appreciated, and
honored accordingly, the many noble traits and qualities possessed by these
bold and wild hunters of the forest. It is an acknowledged fact, that no
nation of whites have ever succeeded so well in gaining the love and
confidence of the red men, as the Franks. It is probable that their
character in many respects was more similar, and adapted to the character of
the Indian, than any other European nation. The "voyageur du Nord," as were
then termed the common class of the French, who visited them for the
purposes of trade, were nearly as illiterate, ignorant, and superstitious as
themselves, and many of them were far beneath the red man in strength of
character and morality.
Their aim was not so much that of gain as of pleasure, and
the enjoyment of present life, and mainly in this respect will be found the
difference between the nature of their intercourse with the natives of
America, and that which has since been carried on by the English and
Americans, who, as a general truth, have made Mammon their God, and have
looked on the Indian but as a tool or means of obtaining riches, and other
equally mercenary ends.
In their lack of care for the morrow, which in a measure
characterized the French "voyageur," and in their continual effervescence of
animal spirits, open-heartedness, and joviality, they agreed fully with the
like characteristics possessed by the Ojibways. Some of my readers may be
surprised at my thus placing the Indian on a par with the laughter-loving
Frenchman, for the reason that he has ever been represented as a morose,
silent, and uncommunicative being. It is only necessary to state that this
is a gross mistake, and but a character (far different from his real one),
assumed by the Indian in the presence of strangers, and especially white
strangers in whom he has no confidence. Another bond which soon more firmly
attached them one to another with strong ties of friendship, was created by
the Frenchmen taking the women of the Ojibways as wives, and rearing large
families who remained in the country, and to this day, the mixture and bonds
of blood between these two people has been perpetuated, and remains
unbroken.
The days of the French domination was the Augustan era of
the fur trade, and beavers were so plenty and the profits arising from the
trade were so large, that the French traders readily afforded to give large
presents of their covetedcommodities, their beloved tobacco and fire-water
to the Indians who visited them at their posts, or on occasions when they
visited them at their own villages. In those days along the lake shore
villages of the Ojibways, from Mackinaw to Fond du Lac of Lake Superior,
there was no music so sweet to the ears of the inhabitants, as the
enlivening boat song of the merry French "voyageurs," as they came from the
direction of Quebec and Montreal each spring of the year--rapidly looming up
from the bosom of the calm lake, laden with the articles so dearly valued
among the wild hunters. They recognized in these yearly visits the "rays of
the fire of their great French father," which he bade them to "look for each
morning (spring) towards the rising of the sun."
No strangers were more welcome to the Ojibways, and warm
were the shaking of hands and embraces on these occasions between the dusky
son of the forest, and the polite and warm-hearted Frank. The dark-eyed
damsels, though they stood bashfully in the rear of those who thronged the
beach to welcome the new-comers, yet with their faces partly hidden they
darted glances of welcome, and waited in the wigwams impatiently for their
white sweethearts to come in the darkness and silence of night, to present
the trinkets which they had brought all the way from Quebec, to adorn their
persons and please their fancy.
After the Ojibways became possessed with fire-arms and
ammunition, the arrival of a French "Bourgeois" with the flag of France
flying at the stern of his canoe, was saluted with a volley of musketry, and
in turn, when any chief approached the "posts" or "forts" accompanied with
the same ensign, discharges of cannons were fired in his honor by the
French. Thus, interchanges of good will and polite attention were
continually kept up between them.
The French early gained the utmost confidence of the
Ojibways, and thereby they became more thoroughly acquainted with their true
and real character, even during the comparative short season in which they
mingled with them as a nation, than the British and Americans are at this
present day, after over a century of intercourse. The French understood
their division into clans, and treated each clan according to the order of
its ascendancy in the tribe. They conformed also to their system of
governmental polity, of which the totemic division formed the principal
ingredient. They were circumspect and careful in bestowing medals, flags,
and other marks of honor, and appointing chiefs, and these acts were never
done unless being first certain of the approbation of the tribe, and it
being in accordance with their civil polity. In this important respect the
British, and American government especially, have lacked most woefully. The
agents and commissioners, and even traders of these two nations, have
appointed chiefs indiscriminately or only in conformity with selfish motives
and ends, and there is nothing which has conduced so much to disorganize,
confuse, and break up the former simple but well-defined civil polity of
these people; and were the matter to be fully investigated, it would be
found that this almost utter disorganization has been one of the chief
stumbling-blocks which has ever been in the way of doing good to the Indian
race. This shortsighted system has created nothing but jealousies and
heart-burnings among the Ojibways. It has broken the former commanding
influence of their hereditary chiefs, and the consequence is, that the tribe
is without a head or government, and it has become infinitely difficult to
treat with them as a people. No good has resulted from this bad and
thoughtless policy even to the governments who have allowed it to be pursued
by its agents. On the contrary, they are punished daily by the evil
consequences arising from it, for in this is to be found the true and first
cause of the complaints which are continually at this day being poured into
the ears of the "Great Father" at Washington, and it is through this that
misunderstandings and non-conformity have arisen to treaties which have been
made by the United States, not only with the Ojibways, but other tribes, and
which are of the same nature that eventually led to the Creek, Seminole and
Black Hawk wars.
go to chapter 9
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