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About The Chemawa American (Chemawa, Or.) 19??-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 1, 1913)
2 THE CHEMAWA AM ERICAN the rifle; know ledge of the forest, the trail and the art of Indian w ar fare; th e silent m arch, the stealthy attack , the hidden am buscade, M oreover Tecum seh was gifted w ith powers of oratory, w ith incom par able tactfulness in diplom acy, and above all else his accom plishm ents were crow ned w ith a sense of honor, a nobility of character, unequaled in any of th e heroes of his race. N either history nor rom ance h ath a m ore th rillin g story than is pre sented by the recital of the m ere facts of T ecu m seh ’s life. But we may not relate them here. D u rin g the period of the A m erican R evolution, Ohio was the g reat battle ground of the contest between the W estern pioneers and the Indian allies of the B ritish. T h e valleys of the Scioto, the S andusky, the M aumee and the M iam is were the tram p in g ground of th e C anadian-B ritish and their savage cohorts. F or tw enty years from the Battle of Point Pleasant (1774) to the Battle of Fallen T im bers (1794) the revolution raged in the Ohio co u n try . In such a school of ceaseless war and continued bloodshed. T ecum seh w as educated in the art of savage w arfare and hardened in his hatred of the w hites. A fter the close of the revolution in New E n g lan d , w here the contest lasted but seven years, the scarred and poverty-stricken veterans of th e C ontinental A rm y sought new homes and an o th er lease of life in th e prom ised land of O hio. T ecum seh w ith a prophet soul saw the final extin ctio n of his people if th e W estern tide of w hite im m igration were not im peded. B eginning in 1787 for three years he traveled amid the W estern and S outhern tribes of his race. It was a w onderful jo u rn ey , ex tending from th e M issouri and M ississippi, to the tribal centers of A labam a, G eorgia and F lorida. In the Fall of 1790 he retu rn ed io his Ohio haunts, famous am ong all his people from the gulf to the G reat Lakes. H is Ohio country was still in the throes of deadly w arfare. T he R evolution was still being continued and the In d ian tribes, urged on by British agents, were stealthily follow ing the forest trails. T he darkness of nig h t was made lurid by the flames of the b u rn in g cabin and th e solitude of the forest was broken by the rifle crack of th e ap p roaching savage, the groans of the dying frontiersm an and the shrieks of his homeless and defenseless wife and children. L ittle T u rtle, th e M iami, was the g u id in g genius of th e tribesm en and rallied his w arrior hosts to resist the invading arm ies of H arm ar, St. Clair and W ayne. lecu m seh became the lieu ten an t and m ainstay of the Miami chieftain, and at th e battle of Fallen T im bers (A u g u st, 1794) led the Shaw nee co n tin g en t and refused to give way to the ad vancing lines of W’ayne, w hen L ittle T u rtle, Blue Jacket and other chieftains sought safety in retreat. But the bravery of T ecum seh was unavailing. T he victory of Mad A nthony W’avne, the “ T o ro n a d o ,”