FROM THE TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA
SECOND SERIES—1899-1900
VOLUME
V SECTION II
ENGLISH HISTORY, LITERATURE, ARCHÆOLOGY, ETC.
HOCHELAGANS
AND MOHAWKS
A LINK IN IROQUOIS HISTORY
By W. D. LIGHTHALL, M.A., F.R.S.L.
For Sale by
J. Hope & Sons, Ottawa; The
Copp-Clark Co., Toronto
Bernard Quaritch, London, England
1899
II. Hochelagans
and Mohawks; A Link in Iroquois History.
By W. D. Lighthall,
M.A., F.R.S.L.
(Presented by John Reade and read May 26, 1899.)
The exact
origin and first history of the race whose energy so
stunted the growth of early Canada
and made the cause of France
in America
impossible, have long been wrapped in mystery. In the days of the first white
settlements the Iroquois are found leagued as the Five Nations in their
familiar territory from the Mohawk River
westward. Whence they came thither has always been a disputed question. The
early Jesuits agreed that they were an off-shoot of the Huron race whose
strongholds were thickly sown on the eastern shore of Lake Huron, but the
Jesuits were not clear as to their course of migration from that region, it
being merely remarked that they had once possessed some settlements on the St.
Lawrence below Montreal, with the apparent inference that they had arrived at
these by way of Lake Champlain. Later writers have drawn the same inference
from the mention made to Cartier by the Hochelagans
of certain enemies from the south whose name and direction had a likeness to
later Iroquois conditions. Charlevoix was persuaded by persons who he
considered had sufficiently studied the subject that their seats before they
left for the country of the Five Nations were about Montreal. The late Horatio Hale[1] put
the more recently current and widely accepted form of this view as follows:
"The clear and positive traditions of all the surviving tribes, Hurons, Iroquois and Tuscaroras,
point to the Lower St.
Lawrence as the earliest known
abode of their stock. Here the first explorer, Cartier, found Indians of this stock
at Hochelaga and Stadacona,
now the sites of Montreal and Quebec. Centuries before his time, according
to the native tradition, the ancestors of the Huron-Iroquois family had dwelt
in this locality, or still further east and nearer to the river's mouth. As the
numbers increased, dissensions arose. The hive swarmed and band after band
moved off to the west and south."
"Their
first station on the south side of the lakes was at the mouth of the Oswego River.[2]
Advancing to the southeast, the emigrants struck the River Hudson" and
thence the ocean. Most of them returned to the Mohawk
River, where the Huron speech was altered to Mohawk. In Iroquois
tradition and in the constitution of their League the Canienga
(Mohawk) nation ranks as 'eldest brother' of the family. A comparison of the
dialects proves this tradition to be well founded. The Canienga
language approaches nearest to the Huron, and is undoubtedly the source from
which all the other Iroquois dialects are derived. Cusick
states positively that the other families, as he styles them, of the Iroquois
household, leaving the Mohawks in their original abode, proceeded step by step
to the westward. The Oneidas halted at their
creek, the Onondagas at their mountain, the Cayugas
at their lake and the Senecas or Sonontowans,
the great hill people, at a lofty eminence which rises south of the Canandaigua Lake." Hale appeals also to the Wyandot
tradition recorded by Peter Dooyentate Clark, that
the Huron originally lived about Montreal
near the "Senecas," until war broke out and
drove them westward. He sets the formation of the League of the Long House as
far back as the fourteenth century.
All these
authors, it will be seen, together with every historian who has referred to the
League,—treat of the Five Nations as always having been one people. A
very different view, based principally on archæology,
has however been recently accepted by at least several of the leading
authorities on the subject,—the view that the Iroquois League was a compound
of two distinct peoples, the Mohawks, in the east, including the Oneidas;
and the Senecas, in the west, including the Onondagas
and Cayugas. Rev. W.M. Beauchamp, of Baldwinsville,
the most thorough living student of the matter, first suggested a late date for
the coming of the Mohawks and formation of the League. He had noticed that the
three Seneca dialects differed very greatly from the two Mohawk,
and that while the local relics of the former showed they had been long settled
in their country, those of the latter evidenced a very recent occupation. He
had several battles with Hale on the subject, the latter arguing chiefly from
tradition and change of language. "The probability," writes Mr. Beauchamp—privately
to the writer—"is that a division took place at Lake Erie, or perhaps
further west; some passed on the north side and became the Neutrals and Hurons; the vanguard becoming the Mohawks or Hochelagans, afterwards Mohawks and Oneidas. Part went
far south, as the Tuscaroras and Cherokees, and a
more northern branch, the Andastes; part followed the
south shore and became the Eries,
Senecas and Cayugas; part
went to the east of Lake
Ontario, removing and
becoming the Onondagas, when the Huron war began."
It is
noticeable that the earliest accounts of the Five Nations speak of them as of
two kinds—Mohawks and "Sinnekes," or as
termed by the French the Inferior and Superior Iroquois. For example Antony Van
Corlear's Journal, edited by Gen. James Grant
Wilson, also certain of the New York
documents. The most thorough local student of early Mohawk town-sites, Mr. S.L.
Frey, of Palatine Bridge, N.Y.,
supports Mr. Beauchamp in his view of the late coming of the Mohawks into the Mohawk River Valley, where they have always been
settled in historic times. According to him, although these people changed
their sites every 25 or 30 years from failure of the wood supply and other
causes, only four prehistoric sites have been discovered in that district, all
the others containing relics of European origin. Mr. Beauchamp believes even
this number too large. Both put forward the idea that the Mohawks were the
ancient race of Hochelaga, whose town on the island of Montreal
was visited by Jacques Cartier in 1535, and had disappeared completely in 1608
when Champlain founded Quebec.
"What had become of these people?" writes Mr. Frey, in his pamphlet
"The Mohawks." "An overwhelming force of wandering Algonquins had destroyed their towns. To what new land had
they gone? I think we shall find them seated in the impregnable strongholds
among the hills and in the dense forests of the Mohawk Valley."
It is my
privilege to take up their theory from the Montreal end and in the light of the local archæology of this place and of early French historical
lore, to supply links which seem to throw considerable light on the problem.
The
description given by Cartier of the picturesque palisaded
town of Hochelaga,
situated near the foot of Mount Royal,
surrounded by cornfields, has frequently been quoted. But other points of
Cartier's narrative, concerning the numbers and relations of the population,
have scarcely been studied. Let us examine this phase of it. During his first
voyage in 1534, in the neighbourhood of Gaspé, he met on the water the first people speaking the
tongue of this race, a temporary fishing community of over 200 souls, men,
women and children, in some 40 canoes, under which they slept, having evidently
no village there, but belonging, as afterwards is stated, to Stadacona. He seized and carried to France two of them,
who, when he returned next year, called the place where they had been taken Honguédo, and said that the north shore, above
Anticosti Island, was the commencement of inhabited country which led to Canada
(the Quebec region), Hochelaga, (Montreal) and the
country of Saguenay, far to the west "whence came the red
copper" (of which axes have since been found in the débris
of Hochelaga, and which, in fact, came from Lake
Superior), and that no man they ever heard of had ever been to the end of the
great river of fresh water above. Here we have the first indication of the
racial situation of the Hochelagans. At the mouth of
the Saguenay River—so
called because it was one of the routes to the Sagnenay
of the Algonquins, west of the Upper Ottawa—he found
four fishing canoes from Canada.
Plenty of fishing was prosecuted from this point upwards. In "the Province of Canada," he proceeds, "there
are several peoples in unwalled villages." At the
Isle of Orleans, just below Quebec, the
principal peace chief, or, Agouhanna of "Canada," Donnaconna, came to them with 12 canoes from the town (ville) of Stadacona, or Stadaconé, which was surrounded by tilled land on the
heights. Twenty-five canoes from Stadacona afterwards
visited them; and later Donnaconna brought on board
"10 or 12 other of the greatest chiefs" with more than 500 persons,
men, women and children, some doubtless from the neighbouring
settlements. If the same 200 persons as in the previous year were absent
fishing at Gaspé, and others in other spots, these
figures argue a considerable population.
Below Stadacona, were four "peoples and settlements": Ajoasté, Starnatam, Tailla (on a mountain) and Satadin
or Stadin. Above Stadacona were Tekenouday (on a mountain) and Hochelay
(Achelacy or Hagouchouda)[3]
which was in open country. Further up were Hochelaga
and some settlements on the island of Montreal, and various other places
unobserved by Cartier, belonging to the same race; who according to a later
statement of the remnant of them, confirmed by archæology,
had several "towns" on the island of Montreal and inhabited "all
the hills to the south and east."[4] The
hills to be seen from Mount Royal to the south are the northern slopes of the
Adirondacks; while to the east are the lone volcanic eminences in the plain,
Montarville, Beloeil, Rougemont, Johnson, Yamaska, Shefford, Orford and the Green Mountains. All these hills deserve
search for Huron-Iroquois town-sites. The general sense of this paragraph
includes an implication also of settlements towards and on Lake
Champlain, that is to say, when taken in connection with the
landscape. (My own dwelling overlooks this landscape.) At the same time let me
say that perhaps due inquiries might locate some of the sites of Ajoaste and the other villages in the Quebec district. In Cartier's third voyage
he refers obscurely, in treating of Montreal, to
"the said town of Tutonaguy." This word,
with French pronunciation, appears to be the same as that still given by
Mohawks to the Island,—Tiotiaké,
meaning "deep water beside shallow," that is to say, "below the
Rapid." In the so-called Cabot map of 1544 the name Hochelaga
is replaced by "Tutonaer,"
apparently from some map of Cartier's. It may be a reproduction of some lost
map of his. Lewis H. Morgan gives "Tiotiake"
as "Do-de-a-ga." Another place named by
Cartier is Maisouna, to which the chief of Hochelay had been gone two days when the explorer made his
settlement a visit. On a map of Ortelius of 1556
quoted by Parkman this name appears to be given as Muscova,
a district placed on the right bank of the Richelieu River and opposite Hochelay, but possibly this is a pure guess, though it is a
likely one. It may perhaps be conjectured that Stadacona,
Tailla and Tekenouday,
being on heights, were the oldest strongholds in their region.
All the country
was covered with forests "except around the peoples, who cut it down to
make their settlement and tillage." At Stadacona
he was shown five scalps of a race called Toudamans
from the south, with whom they were constantly at war, and who had killed about
200 of their people at Massacre
Island, Bic, in a cave, while they were on the way to Honguédo to fish. All these names must of course be given
the old French pronunciation.
Proceeding
up the river near Hochelaga he found "a great
number of dwellings along the shore" inhabited by fisherfolk,
as was the custom of the Huron-Iroquois in the summer season. The village
called Hochelay was situated about forty-five miles
above Stadacona, at the Richelieu
rapid, between which and Hochelaga, a distance of
about 135 miles, he mentions no village. This absence of settlements I
attribute to the fact that the intermediate Three Rivers region was an ancient
special appurtenance of the Algonquins, with whom the Hochelagans were to all
appearance then on terms of friendly sufferance and trade, if not alliance. In
later days the same region was uninhabited, on account of Iroquois incursions
by the River Richelieu and Lake Champlain. In
the islands at the head of Lake St. Peter, Cartier met five hunters who
directed him to Hochelaga. "More than a
thousand" persons, he says, received them with joy at Hochelaga.
This expression of number however is not very definite. It is frequently used
by Dante to signify a multitude in the Divina
Comédia. The town of Hochelaga consisted
of "about fifty houses, in length about fifty paces each at most, and
twelve or fifteen paces wide," made of bark on sapling frames in the
manner of the Iroquois long houses. The round "fifties" are obviously
approximate. The plan of the town given in Ramusio
shows some forty-five fires, each serving some five families, but the interior
division differs so greatly from that of early Huron and Iroquois houses, and
from his phrase "fifty by twelve or fifteen," that it appears to be
the result of inaccurate drawing. There is therefore considerable room for
difference as to the population of the town, ranging from say 1,200 to 2,000
souls, the verbal description which is much the more authoritative, inclining
in favour of the latter. Any estimate of the total population
of the Hochelagan race on the river, must be a guess.
If, however, those on the island of Montreal be set at 2,000, and the
"more than 500" of Stadacona be considered
as a fair average for the principal town and 300 (which also was the average
estimated by Père Lalemant
for the Neutral nation) as an average for the eight or so villages of the
Quebec district, (the absentees, such as the 200 at Gaspé
from Stadacona being perhaps offset by contingents
from the places close to Stadacona) we have some 4,900
accounted for. Those on all the hills to the south and east of Mount Royal would add anywhere from say 3,000 to an
indefinitely greater number more. Perhaps 5,000, however, should not be
exceeded as the limit for these hills and Lake Champlain.
We arrive therefore at a guess of from 7,900 to 9,900 as the total. As the
lower figures seem conservative, compared with the early average of Huron and
Iroquois villages, the guess may perhaps be raised a little to say from 10,000
to 11,000. "This people confines itself to
tillage and fishing, for they do not leave their country and are not migratory
like those of Canada and Saguenay, although the said Canadians are subject to
them, with eight or nine other peoples who are on the said river."
Nevertheless the site of Hochelaga, unearthed in
1860, shows them to have been traders to some extent with the west,
evidently through the Ottawa Algonquins. What Cartier
did during his brief visit to the town itself is well known. The main point for
us is that three men led him to the top of Mount Royal
and showed him the country. They told him of the Ottawa River and of three
great rapids in the St. Lawrence, after passing which, "one
could sail more than three moons along the said river," doubtless meaning
along the Great Lakes. Silver and brass they
identified as coming from that region, and "there were Agojudas,
or wicked people, armed even to the fingers," of whom they showed
"the make of their armor, which is of cords and wood laced and woven
together; giving to understand that the said Agojudas
are continually at war with one and other." This testimony clearly
describes the armour of the early Hurons
and Iroquois[5] as
found by Champlain, and seems to relate to war between the Hurons
and Senecas at that period and to an aversion to them
by the people of the town of Hochelaga themselves;
who were, however, living in security from them at the time, apparently cut off
from regular communication with them by Algonquin peoples, particularly those
of the Ottawa, who controlled Huron communication with the lower St. Lawrence
in the same way in Champlain's days.
On
returning to Stadacona, Cartier, by talking with Donnaconna, learnt what showed this land of Saguenay
so much talked of by these people, to be undoubtedly the Huron country.
"The straight and good and safest road to it is by the Fleuve
(St. Lawrence), to above Hochelaga and by the river
which descends from the said Saguenay and
enters the said Fleuve (as we had seen); and thence
it takes a month to reach." This is simply the Ottawa
route to Lake Huron used by the Jesuits in the
next century. What they had seen was the Ottawa River entering the St.
Lawrence—from the top of Mount Royal, whence
it is visible to-day. The name Saguenay may possibly be Saginaw,—the
old Saguenam, the "very deep bay on the
west shore of Lake
Huron," of Charlevoix, (Book XI.) though it is not
necessarily Saginaw
Bay itself, as such names
shift. "And they gave to understand that in that country
the people are clothed with clothes like us, and there are many
peoples in towns and good persons and that they have a great
quantity of gold and of red copper. And they told us that all the
land from the said first river to Hochelagea and
Saguenay is an island surrounded by streams and the said great river (St.
Lawrence); and that after passing Saguenay, said river (Ottawa) enters two
or three great lakes of water, very large; after which a fresh water sea is
reached, whereof there is no mention of having seen the end, as they
have heard from those of the Saguenay; for they told us they had never been
there themselves." Yet later, in chapter XIX.,
it is stated that old Donnaconna assured them he had
been in the land of the Saguenay, where he
related several impossible marvels, such as people of only one leg. It is to be
noted that "the peoples in towns," who are apparently Huron-Iroquois,
are here referred to as "good people," while the Hochelagans
speak of them as "wicked." This is explicable enough as a difference
of view on distant races with whom they had no
contact. It seems to imply that the "Canada"
people were not in such close communication with the town of Hochelaga as to have the same opinions and
perhaps the Canada
view of the Hurons as good persons was the original
view of the early settlers, while the Hochelagans may
have had unpleasant later experiences or echo those of the Ottawa Algonquins. But furthermore they told him of the Richelieu
River where apparently it took a month to go with their canoes from Sainte
Croix (Stadacona) to a country "where there are
never ice nor snow; but where there are constant wars one against another, and
there are oranges, almonds, nuts, plums, and other kinds of fruit in great
abundance, and oil is made from trees, very good for the cure of diseases;
there the inhabitants are clothed and accoutred in
skins like themselves." This land Cartier considered to be Florida,—but
the point for our present purpose is the frequenting of the Richelieu, Lake
Champlain and lands far south of them by the Hochelagans
at that period. At the beginning of the seventeenth century Capt. John Smith
met the canoes of an Iroquois people on the upper part of Chesapeake
Bay.
We may now
draw some conclusions. Originally the population of the St. Lawrence valley
seems to have been occupied by Algonquins, as these
people surrounded it on all sides. A question I would like to see investigated
is whether any of these built villages and grew corn here, as did some of the Algonquins of the New England coast and those of Allumette Island on the Ottawa.
This might explain some of the deserted Indian clearings which the early
Jesuits noted along the shore of the river, and of which Champlain, in 1611,
used one of about 60 acres at Place Royale, Montreal. Cartier, it is seen, expressly
explains some of them to be Huron-Iroquois clearings cultivated under his own
observation. The known Algonquins of the immediate
region were all nomadic.
In 1534 we
have, from below Stadacona (Quebec) to above Hochelaga (Montreal), and down the Richelieu River to Lake
Champlain, the valley in possession of a Huron-Iroquois race, dominated by Hochelaga, a town of say 2,000 souls, judging from the
Huron average and from Cartier's details. The descendants of the Hochelagans in 1642 pointed out the spots where there were
"several towns" on the island. Mr. Beauchamp holds, with Parkman,
Dawson and other writers, that "those who pointed
out spots in 1642 were of an Algonquin tribe, not descendants of the
Mohawk Hochelagans, but locally their
successors." But I cannot accept this Algonquin theory, as their
connection with the Hochelagans is too explicit and I
shall give other reasons further on. The savages, it is true, called the island
by an Algonquin name; "the island where there was a city or village,"[6] the
Algonquin phrase for which was Minitik-Outen-Entagougiban,
but these later terms have small bearing. The site of one of the towns on the
island is conjectured, from the finding of relics, to have been at Longue Pointe, nine miles below Hochelaga;
a village appears from Cartier's account of his third voyage to have existed
about the Lachine Rapids; and another was some miles below, probably at Point
St. Charles or the Little River at Verdun. Fourteen skeletons, buried after the
Mohawk fashion, have been discovered on the upper slope of Westmount, the southern ridge of Mount Royal,
about a mile from Hochelaga and not far from an old
Indian well, indicating possibly the proximity of another pre-historic
town-site of the race, and at any rate a burying ground. The identification and
excavations were made by the writer. If, however, the southern enemies, called Toudamans, five of whose scalps were shown Cartier at Stadacona, were, as one conjecture has it, Tonontouans or Senecas, the
Iroquois identity theory must be varied, but it is much more likely the Toudamans were the Etchemins. At
any rate it seems clear that the Hochelagan race came
down the St. Lawrence as a spur (probably an adventurous fishing party) from
the great Huron-Iroquois centre about Lake Huron[7];
for that their advent had been recent appears from the fewness of sites
discovered, from the smallness of the population, considering the richness of
the country, and especially from the fact that the Huron, and the Seneca, and
their own tongues were still mutually comprehensible, notwithstanding the rapid
changes of Indian dialects. Everything considered,
their coming might perhaps be placed about 1450, which could give time for the
settlements on Lake Champlain, unearthed by
Dr. D.S. Kellogg and others and rendered probable by their pottery and other
evidence as being Huron-Iroquois.[8]
Cartier, as we have seen, described the Hochelagan
towns along the river.
SHALLOW GRAVE IN PREHISTORIC BURYING GROUND
AT WESTMOUNT ON MOUNT ROYAL SHOWING ATTITUDE OF SEPULTURE.
The
likeness of the names Tekenouday and Ajoasté to that of the Huron town Tekenonkiaye,
and the Andastean Andoasté,
shows how close was the relationship. Nevertheless the
Hochelagans were quite cut off from the Hurons, whose country as we have found, some of them point
to and describe to Cartier as inhabited by evil men. As the Stadacona
people, more distant, independently refer to them as good, no war could have
been then proceeding with them.
In 1540 when Roberval came—and down to
1543—the conditions were still unchanged. What of the events between this date and the coming of Champlain in
1605? This period can be filled up to some extent.
About 1560
the Hurons came down, conquered the Hochelagans and their subject peoples and destroyed Hochelaga. I reach this date as follows: In 1646 (Relation
of 1646, p. 34) Père Lalemant
reports that "under the Algonquin name" the French included "a
diversity of small peoples," one of which was named the Onontchataronons or "the tribe of Iroquet,"
"whose ancestors formerly inhabited the island of Montreal," and one
of their old men "aged say eighty years" said "my mother told me
that in her youth the Hurons drove us from
this island." (1646, p. 40.) This makes it clear that the inroad was Huron.
Note that this man of eighty years does not mention having himself lived
on the island; and also the addition "in her youth." This fact
brings us back to before 1566. But in 1642, another "old man" states
that his "grandfathers" had lived there. Note that he does not say
his parents nor himself. These two statements, I
think, reasoning from the average ages of old men, carry us back to about
1550-60. Champlain, in 1622, notes a remark of two Iroquois that the war with
the Hurons was then "more than fifty years"
old. The Huron inroad could not likely have occurred for several years after
1542, for so serious an incursion would have taken some years to grow to such a
point out of profound peace. 1550 would therefore appear a little early. The
facts demonstrate incidentally a period of prosperity and dominance on the part
of the Hurons themselves, for instead of a mere incursion,
it exhibits, even if made by invitation of the Algonquins,
a permanent breaking through of the barriers between the Huron country and the
Montreal neighbourhood, and a continuance of their
power long enough and sufficiently to press forward against the enemy even into
Lake Champlain. It also shows that the Superior Iroquois were not then strong
enough to confine them. Before the League, the latter were only weak single
tribes. When Dutch firearms were added to the advantage of the league, the Hurons finally fell from their power, which was therefore
apparently at its height about 1560.
Charlevoix,
Histoire de la Nouvelle France, end of Bk. V., after describing the
first mass at Ville Marie, in 1642, says: "The evening of the same day M.
de Maisonneuve desired to visit the Mountain which
gave the island its name, and two old Indians who accompanied him thither,
having led him to the top, told him they were of the tribe who had formerly
inhabited this country." "We were," they added, "very
numerous and all the hills (collines)
which you see to the south and east, were peopled. The
Hurons drove thence our ancestors, of whom a part
took refuge among the Abénakis, others withdrew
into the Iroquois cantons, a few remained with our
conquerors." They promised Maisonneuve to do all
they could to bring back their people, "but apparently could not succeed
in reassembling the fragments of this dispersed tribe, which doubtless is that
of the Iroquois of which I have spoken in my Journal."
A proof
that this people of Iroquet were not originally Algonquins is that by their own testimony they had
cultivated the ground, one of them actually took up a handful of the soil and
called attention to its goodness; and they also directly connected themselves
in a positive manner with the Hochelagans by the
dates and circumstances indicated in their remarks as above interpreted. The
use of the term "Algonquin" concerning them is very ambiguous and as
they were merged among Algonquin tribes they were no doubt accustomed to use that
language. Their Huron-Iroquois name, the fact that they were put forward to
interpret to the Iroquois in Champlain's first excursion; and that a portion of
them had joined the Iroquois, another portion the Hurons,
and the rest remained a little band by themselves,
seem to add convincingly to the proof that they were not true Algonquins. Their two names "Onontchataronons"
and "Iroquet" are Iroquois. The ending
"Onons" (Onwe)
means "men" and is not properly part of the name. Charlevoix thought
them Hurons, from their name. They were a very small
band and, while mentioned several times in the Jesuit Relations, had
disappeared by the end of the seventeenth century from active history. It was
doubtless impossible for a remnant so placed to maintain themselves against the
great Iroquois war parties.
A minor
question to suggest itself is whether there is any connection between the names
"Iroquet" and "Iroquois". Were
they originally forms of the same word? Or were they two related names of
divisions of a people? Certainly two closely related peoples have these closely
similar names. They were as clearly used as names of distinct tribes however,
in the seventeenth century. The derivation of "Iroquois" given by
Charlevoix from "hiro"—"I have
spoken" does not seem at all likely; but the analogy of the first
syllables of the names Er-ié, Hur-ons,
Hir-oquois, Ir-oquet and
Cherokee may have something in it.
The Iroquets or Hochelagans
attributed their great disaster,—the destruction of their towns and
dispossession of their island,—to the Hurons, but
Charlevoix[9]
records an Algonquin victory over them which seems to have preceded, and
contributed to, that event, though the lateness of Charlevoix renders the story
not so reliable in detail as the personal recollections of the Iroquets above given: His story[10]
given "on the authority of those most versed in the old history of the
country", proceeds as follows: "Some Algonquins
were at war with the Onontcharonnons better known
under the name of Tribe of Iroquet, and whose former
residence was, it is said, in the Island of Montreal. The name they bear proclaims, they were of Huron speech; nevertheless it is
claimed that it was the Hurons who drove them from
their ancient country, and who in part destroyed them. However that may be,
they were at the time I speak of, at war with the Algonquins,
who, to finish this war at one stroke, thought of a stratagem, which
succeeded". This stratagem was an ambush placed on both sides of the River
Bécancour near Three Rivers, with some pretended
fishermen out in canoes as decoys. The Iroquets
attacked and pursued the fishermen, but in the moment of victory, a hail of
arrows issued from the bushes along both shores. Their canoes being pierced,
and the majority wounded, they all perished. "The tribe of Iroquet never recovered from this disaster; and none to day
remain. The quantity of corpses in the water and on the banks of the river so
infected it, that it retains the name of Rivière Puante"; (Stinking
River).
Charlevoix[11]
gives, as well supported, the story of the origin of the war between the
Iroquois and Algonquins. "The Iroquois had made
with them a sort of alliance very useful to both." They gave grain for
game and armed aid, and thus both lived long on good terms. At last a
disagreement rose in a joint party of 12 young hunters, on account of the
Iroquois succeeding while the Algonquins failed in
the chase. The Algonquins, therefore, maliciously
tomahawked the Iroquois in their sleep. Thence arose
the war.
In 1608,
according to Ferland[12]
based evidently upon the statement of Champlain, the remnant of the Hochelagans left in Canada occupied the triangle above
Montreal now bounded by Vandreuil, Kingston and Ottawa.
This perhaps indicates it as the upper part of their former territory. Sanson's map places them at about the same part of the Ottawa in the middle of
the seventeenth century and identifies them with La Petite Nation, giving them
as "Onontcharonons ou
La Petite Nation". That remnant accompanied Champlain against the
Iroquois, being of course under the influence of their masters the Hurons and Algonquins. Doubtless
their blood is presently represented among the Huron and Algonquin mission
Indians of Oka, Lorette,
Petite Nation, etc., and perhaps among those of Caughnawaga
and to some extent, greater or less, among the Six Nations proper.
From the
foregoing outline of their history, it does not appear as if the Hochelagans were exactly the Mohawks proper. It seems more
likely that by 1560, settlements, at first mere fishing-parties, then
fishing-villages, and later more developed strongholds with agriculture, had
already been made on Lake Champlain by independent offshoots of the Hochelagan communities, of perhaps some generations
standing, and not unlikely by arrangement with the Algonquins
of the Lake similar to the understanding on the river St. Lawrence, as peace
and travel appear to have existed there. The bonds of confederacy between
village and village were always shifting and loose among these races until the
Great League. To their Lake Champlain cousins
the Hochelagans would naturally fly for refuge in the
day of defeat, for there was no other direction suitable for their retreat. The
Hurons and Algonquins
carried on the war against the fused peoples, down into Lake
Champlain. When, after more than fifty years of the struggle,
Champlain goes down to that Lake in 1609, he
finds there the clearings from which they have been driven, and marks their cabins
on his map of the southeast shore. This testimony is confirmed by that of archæology showing their movement at the same period into
the Mohawk Valley. Doubtless their grandchildren
among the Iroquois, like their grandchildren among the Algonquins,
remembered perfectly well the fact of their Huron and Algonquin wrongs, and led
many a war party back to scenes known to them through tradition, and which it
was their ambition to recover. It seems then to be the fact that the Mohawks
proper, or some of their villages, while perhaps not exactly Hochelagans, were part of the kindred peoples recently
sprung from and dominated by them and were driven out at the same time. The two
peoples—Mohawks and Iroquets—had no great time
before, if not at the time of Cartier's arrival—been one race living together
in the St. Lawrence valley: In the territory just west of the Mohawk valley,
they found the "Senecas" as the Onondagas, Cayugas and Senecas together were
at first called, and soon, through the genius of the Mohawk Hiawatha, they
formed with them the famous League, in the face of the common enemy. By that
time the Oneidas
had become separated from the Mohawks. These indications place the date of the
League very near 1600. The studies of Dr. Kellogg of Plattsburgh
on the New York side of Lake Champlain and of
others on the Vermont
shore, who have discovered several Mohawk sites on
that side of the lake may be expected to supply a link of much interest on the
whole question, from the comparison of pottery and pipes. On the whole the Hochelagan facts throw much light both forward on the
history of the Iroquois and backwards on that of the Huron stock. Interpreted
as above, they afford a meagre but connected story
through a period hitherto lost in darkness, and perhaps a ray by which further
links may still be discovered through continued archæological
investigation.
NOTE. Like
the numbers of the Hochelagan race, the question how
long they had been in the St. Lawrence valley must be problematical. Sir
William Dawson describes the site of Hochelaga as
indicating a residence of several generations. Their own statements regarding
the Huron country—that they "had never been there", and that they
gathered their knowledge of it from the Ottawa Algonquins,
permits some deductions. If the Hochelagans—including
their old men—had never been westward among their kindred, it is plain that the
migration must have taken place more than the period of an old man's life
previous—that is to say more than say eighty years. If to this we add that the
old men appear not even to have derived such knowledge as they possessed from
their parents but from strangers, then the average full life of aged parents
should be added, or say sixty years more, making a total of at least one
hundred and forty years since the immigration. Something might, it is true, be
allowed for a sojourn at intermediate points: and the scantiness of the remarks
is also to be remembered. But there remains to account for the considerable
population which had grown up in the land from apparently one centre. If the
original intruders were four hundred, for example, then in doubling every
twenty years, they would number 12,800 in a century. But this rate is higher
than their state of "Middle-Barbarism" is likely to have permitted
and a hundred and fifty years would seem to be as fast as they could be
expected to attain the population they possessed in Cartier's time.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] "Iroquois Book of
Rites," p. 10.
[2] Ibid., p. 13.
[3] The latter I conjecture not to be the real name of
the place but that the Stadacona people had referred
to Hochelay as "Agojuda"
or wicked. The chief of Hochelay on one occasion
warned Cartier of plots at Stadacona, and there
appears to have been some antagonism between the places. The Hochelay people seem to have been Hochelagans
proper not Stadacona Hochelagans.
Hochelay-aga could mean "people of Hochelay."
[4] Relation of 1642.
[5] Similar armour, though
highly elaborated, is to be seen in the suits of Japanese warriors, made of
cords and lacquered wood woven together.
[6] Relation of 1642, p. 36.
[7] Two of the Huron nations settled in Canada West
about 1400; another about 1590; the fourth in 1610. See Relations,—W.M.
Beauchamp.
[8] Dr. Kellogg, whose collection is very large and
his studies valuable, writes me as follows: "In 1886 Mr. Frey sent me a
little box of Indian pottery from his vicinity (the Mohawk Valley).
It contained chiefly edge pieces of jars, whose ornamentation outside near the
top was in lines, and nearly every one of these pieces also had the deep
finger nail indentation. I spread these out on a board. Many had also the
small circle ornamentation, made perhaps by the end of a hollow bone. This
pottery I have always called Iroquois. At two sites near Plattsburg this type
prevails. But otherwise whenever we have found this type we have looked on it
curiously. It is not the type prevailing here. The type here has
ornamentations consisting of dots and dotted lines, dots in lines, scallop
stamps, etc. These dots on a single jar are hundreds and perhaps thousands in
number. Even in Vermont
the Iroquois type is abundant. This confirms what Champlain's Indian friends
told him about the country around the mountains in the east (i.e. in Vermont) being occupied
by their enemies.... The pottery here indicates a much closer relation with
that at Hochelaga than with that at Palatine Bridge
(Mohawk Valley, N.Y.)."
[9] Journal, Vol. I., pp. 162-4.
[10] Journal Historique d'un
Voyage à L'Am., Lettre VI.
[11] Journal, end of Letter XII.
[12] Hist. du Canada, Vol.
I., p. 92.