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The Aborigines of Canada
Of the uncounted centuries of the history of the red
man in America before the coming of the Europeans we know very
little indeed. Very few of the tribes possessed even a primitive art
of writing. It is true that the Aztecs of Mexico, and the ancient
Toltecs who preceded them, understood how to write in pictures, and
that, by this means, they preserved some record of their rulers and
of the great events of their past. The same is true of the Mayas of
Central America, whose ruined temples are still to be traced in the
tangled forests of Yucatan and Guatemala. The ancient Peruvians also
had a system, not exactly of writing, but of record by means of
QUIPUS or twisted woolen cords of different colors: it is through
such records that we have some knowledge of Peruvian history during
about a hundred years before the coming of the Spaniards, and some
traditions reaching still further back. But nowhere was the art of
writing sufficiently developed in America to give us a real history
of the thoughts and deeds of its people before the arrival of
Columbus.
This is especially true of those families of the great red race
which inhabited what is now Canada. They spent a primitive
existence, living thinly scattered along the sea-coast, and in the
forests and open glades of the district of the Great Lakes, or
wandering over the prairies of the west. In hardly any case had they
any settled abode or fixed dwelling-places. The Iroquois and some
Algonquins built Long Houses of wood and made stockade forts of
heavy timber. But not even these tribes, who represented the
furthest advance towards civilization among the savages of North
America, made settlements in the real sense. They knew nothing of
the use of the metals. Such poor weapons and tools as they had were
made of stone, of wood, and of bone. It is true that ages ago
prehistoric men had dug out copper from the mines that lie beside
Lake Superior, for the traces of their operations there are still
found. But the art of working metals probably progressed but a
little way and then was lost, overwhelmed perhaps in some ancient
savage conquest. The Indians found by Cartier and Champlain knew
nothing of the melting of metals for the manufacture of tools. Nor
had they anything but the most elementary form of agriculture. They
planted corn in the openings of the forest, but they did not fell
trees to make a clearing or plough the ground. The harvest provided
by nature and the products of the chase were their sole sources of
supply, and in their search for this food so casually offered they
moved to and fro in the depths of the forest or roved endlessly upon
the plains. One great advance, and only one, they had been led to
make. The waterways of North America are nature's highway through
the forest. The bark canoe in which the Indians floated over the
surface of the Canadian lakes and rivers is a marvel of construction
and wonderfully adapted to its purpose: This was their great
invention. In nearly all other respects the Indians of Canada had
not emerged even from savagery to that stage half way to
civilization which is called barbarism.
These Canadian aborigines seem to have been few in number. It is
probable that, when the continent was discovered, Canada, from the
Atlantic to the Pacific, contained about 220,000 natives--about half
as many people as are now found in Toronto. They were divided into
tribes or clans, among which we may distinguish certain family
groups spread out over great areas.
Most northerly of all was the great tribe of the Eskimos, who were
found all the way from Greenland to Northern Siberia. The name
Eskimo was not given by these people to themselves. It was used by
the Abnaki Indians in describing to the whites the dwellers of the
far north, and it means 'the people who eat raw meat.' The Eskimo
called and still call themselves the Innuit, which means 'the
people.'
The exact relation of the Eskimo to the other races of the continent
is hard to define. From the fact that the race was found on both
sides of the Bering Sea, and that its members have dark hair and
dark eyes, it was often argued that they were akin to the Mongolians
of China. This theory, however, is now abandoned. The resemblance in
height and color is only superficial, and a more careful view of the
physical make-up of the Eskimo shows him to resemble the other races
of America far more closely than he resembles those of Asia. A
distinguished American historian, John Fiske, believed that the
Eskimos are the last remnants of the ancient cave-men who in the
Stone Age inhabited all the northern parts of Europe. Fiske's theory
is that at this remote period continuous land stretched by way of
Iceland and Greenland from Europe to America, and that by this means
the race of cave-men was able to extend itself all the way from
Norway and Sweden to the northern coasts of America. In support of
this view he points to the strangely ingenious and artistic drawings
of the Eskimos. These drawings are made on ivory and bone, and are
so like the ancient bone-pictures found among the relics of the
cave-men of Europe that they can scarcely be distinguished.
The theory is only a conjecture. It is certain that at one time the
Eskimo race extended much farther south than it did when the white
men came to America; in earlier days there were Eskimos far south of
Hudson Bay, and perhaps even south of the Great Lakes.
As a result of their situation the Eskimos led a very different life
from that of the Indians to the south. They must rely on fishing and
hunting for food. In that almost treeless north they had no wood to
build boats or houses, and no vegetables or plants to supply them
either with food or with the materials of industry. But the very
rigor of their surroundings called forth in them a marvelous
ingenuity. They made boats of seal skins stretched tight over walrus
bones, and clothes of furs and of the skins and feathers of birds.
They built winter houses with great blocks of snow put together in
the form of a bowl turned upside down. They heated their houses by
burning blubber or fat in dish-like lamps chipped out of stones.
They had, of course, no written literature. They were, however, not
devoid of art. They had legends and folk-songs, handed down from
generation to generation with the utmost accuracy. In the long night
of the Arctic winter they gathered in their huts to hear strange
monotonous singing by their bards: a kind of low chanting, very
strange to European ears, and intended to imitate the sounds of
nature, the murmur of running waters and the sobbing of the sea. The
Eskimos believed in spirits and monsters whom they must appease with
gifts and incantations. They thought that after death the soul
either goes below the earth to a place always warm and comfortable,
or that it is taken up into the cold forbidding brightness of the
polar sky. When the aurora borealis, or Northern Lights, streamed
across the heavens, the Eskimos thought it the gleam of the souls of
the dead visible in their new home.
Farthest east of all the British North American Indians were the
Beothuks. Their abode was chiefly Newfoundland, though they wandered
also in the neighborhood of the Strait of Belle Isle and along the
north shore of the Gulf of St Lawrence. They were in the lowest
stage of human existence and lived entirely by hunting and fishing.
Unlike the Eskimos they had no dogs, and so stern were the
conditions of their life that they maintained with difficulty the
fight against the rigor of nature. The early explorers found them on
the rocky coasts of Belle Isle, wild and half clad. They smeared
their bodies with red ochre, bright in color, and this earned for
them the name of Red Indians. From the first, they had no friendly
relations with the Europeans who came to their shores, but lived in
a state of perpetual war with them. The Newfoundland fishermen and
settlers hunted down the Red Indians as if they were wild beasts,
and killed them at sight. Now and again, a few members of this
unhappy race were carried home to England to be exhibited at country
fairs before a crowd of grinning yokels who paid a penny apiece to
look at the 'wild men.'
Living on the mainland, next to the red men of Newfoundland lay the
great race of the Algonquins, spread over a huge tract of country,
from the Atlantic coast to the head of the Great Lakes, and even
farther west. The Algonquins were divided into a great many tribes,
some of whose names are still familiar among the Indians of to-day.
The Micmac of Nova Scotia, the Malecite of New Brunswick, the
Naskapi of Quebec, the Chippewa of Ontario, and the Cree of the
prairie, are of this stock. It is even held that the Algonquins are
to be considered typical specimens of the American race. They were
of fine stature, and in strength and muscular development were quite
on a par with the races of the Old World. Their skin was
copper-colored, their lips and noses were thin, and their hair in
nearly all cases was straight and black. When the Europeans first
saw the Algonquins they had already made some advance towards
industrial civilization. They built huts of woven boughs, and for
defense sometimes surrounded a group of huts with a palisade of
stakes set up on end. They had no agriculture in the true sense, but
they cultivated Indian corn and pumpkins in the openings of the
forests, and also the tobacco plant, with the virtues of which they
were well acquainted. They made for themselves heavy and clumsy
pottery and utensils of wood, they wove mats out of rushes for their
houses, and they made clothes from the skin of the deer, and
head-dresses from the bright feathers of birds. Of the metals they
knew, at the time of the discovery of America, hardly anything. They
made some use of copper, which they chipped and hammered into rude
tools and weapons. But they knew nothing of melting the metals, and
their arrow-heads and spear-points were made, for the most part, not
of metals, but of stone. Like other Indians, they showed great
ingenuity in fashioning bark canoes of wonderful lightness.
We must remember, however, that with nearly all the aborigines of
America, at least north of Mexico, the attempt to utilize the
materials and forces supplied by nature had made only slight and
painful progress. We are apt to think that it was the mere laziness
of the Indians which prevented more rapid advance. It may be that we
do not realize their difficulties. When the white men first came
these rude peoples were so backward and so little trained in using
their faculties that any advance towards art and industry was
inevitably slow and difficult. This was also true, no doubt, of the
peoples who, long centuries before, had been in the same degree of
development in Europe, and had begun the intricate tasks which a
growth towards civilization involved. The historian Robertson
describes in a vivid passage the backward state of the savage tribes
of America. 'The most simple operation,' he says, 'was to them an
undertaking of immense difficulty and labor. To fell a tree with no
other implements than hatchets of stone was employment for a month.
Their operations in agriculture were equally slow and defective. In
a country covered with woods of the hardest timber, the clearing of
a small field destined for culture required the united efforts of a
tribe, and was a work of much time and great toil.'
The religion of the Algonquin Indians seems to have been a rude
nature worship. The Sun, as the great giver of warmth and light, was
the object of their adoration; to a lesser degree, they looked upon
fire as a superhuman thing, worthy of worship. The four winds of
heaven, bringing storm and rain from the unknown boundaries of the
world, were regarded as spirits. Each Indian clan or section of a
tribe chose for its special devotion an animal, the name of which
became the distinctive symbol of the clan. This is what is meant by
the 'totems' of the different branches of a tribe.
The Algonquins knew nothing of the art of writing, beyond rude
pictures scratched or painted on wood. The Algonquin tribes, as we
have seen, roamed far to the west. One branch frequented the upper
Saskatchewan river. Here the ashes of the prairie fires discolored
their moccasins and turned them black, and, in consequence, they
were called the Blackfeet Indians. Even when they moved to other
parts of the country, the name was still applied to them.
Occupying the stretch of country to the south of the Algonquins was
the famous race known as the Iroquoian Family. We generally read of
the Huron and the Iroquois as separate tribes. They really belonged,
however, to one family, though during the period of Canadian history
in which they were prominent they had become deadly enemies. When
Cartier discovered the St Lawrence and made his way to the island of
Montreal, Huron Indians inhabited all that part of the country. When
Champlain came, two generations later, they had vanished from that
region, but they still occupied a part of Ontario around Lake Simcoe
and south and east of Georgian Bay. We always connect the name
Iroquois with that part of the stock which included the allied Five
Nations--the Mohawks, Onondagas, Seneca, Oneidas, and Cayuga,--and
which occupied the country between the Hudson river and Lake
Ontario. This proved to be the strongest strategical position in
North America. It lies in the gap or break of the Alleghany ridge,
the one place south of the St Lawrence where an easy and ready
access is afforded from the sea-coast to the interior of the
continent. Any one who casts a glance at the map of the present
Eastern states will realize this, and will see why it is that New
York, at the mouth of the Hudson, has become the greatest city of
North America. Now, the same reason which has created New York gave
to the position of the Five Nations its great importance in Canadian
history. But in reality the racial stock of the Iroquois extended
much farther than this, both west and south. It took in the
well-known tribe of the Erie, and also the Indians of Chesapeake Bay
and the Potomac. It included even the Tuscarora of the Roanoke in
North Carolina, who afterwards moved north and changed the five
nations into six.
The Iroquois were originally natives of the plain, connected very
probably with the Dakotas of the west. But they moved eastwards from
the Mississippi valley towards Niagara, conquering as they went. No
other tribe could compare with them in either bravery or ferocity.
They possessed in a high degree both the virtues and the vices of
Indian character--the unflinching courage and the diabolical cruelty
which have made the Indian an object of mingled admiration and
contempt. In bodily strength and physical endurance they were
unsurpassed. Even in modern days the enervating influence of
civilization has not entirely removed the original vigour of the
strain. During the American Civil War of fifty years ago the five
companies of Iroquois Indians recruited in Canada and in the state
of New York were superior in height and measurement to any other
body of five hundred men in the northern armies.
When the Iroquoian Family migrated, the Huron settled in the western
peninsula of Ontario. The name of Lake Huron still recalls their
abode. But a part of the race kept moving eastward. Before the
coming of the whites, they had fought their way almost to the sea.
But they were able to hold their new settlements only by hard
fighting. The great stockade which Cartier saw at Hochelaga, with
its palisades and fighting platforms, bore witness to the ferocity
of the struggle. At that place Cartier and his companions were
entertained with gruesome tales of Indian fighting and of wholesale
massacres. Seventy years later, in Champlain's time, the Hochelaga
stockade had vanished, and the Huron had been driven back into the
interior. But for nearly two centuries after Champlain the Iroquois
retained their hold on the territory from Lake Ontario to the
Hudson. The conquests and wars of extermination of these savages,
and the terror which they inspired, have been summed up by General
Francis Walker in the saying: 'They were the scourge of God upon the
aborigines of the continent.'
The Iroquois were in some respects superior to most of the Indians
of the continent. Though they had a limited agriculture, and though
they made hardly any use of metals, they had advanced further in
other directions than most savages. They built of logs, houses long
enough to be divided into several compartments, with a family in
each compartment. By setting a group of houses together, and
surrounding them with a palisade of stakes and trees set on end, the
settlement was turned into a kind of fort, and could bid defiance to
the limited means of attack possessed by their enemies. Inside their
houses they kept a good store of corn, pumpkins and dried meat,
which belonged not to each man singly but to the whole group in
common. This was the type of settlement seen at Quebec and at
Hochelaga, and, later on, among the Five Nations. Indeed, the Five
Nations gave to themselves the picturesque name of the Long House,
for their confederation resembled, as it were, the long wooden
houses that held the families together.
All this shows that the superiority of the Iroquois over their
enemies lay in organization. In this they were superior even to
their kinsmen the Huron. All Indian tribes kept women in a condition
which we should think degrading. The Indian women were drudges; they
carried the burdens, and did the rude manual toil of the tribe.
Among the Iroquois, however, women were not wholly despised;
sometimes, if of forceful character, they had great influence in the
councils of the tribe. Among the Huron, on the other hand, women
were treated with contempt or brutal indifference. The Huron woman,
worn out with arduous toil, rapidly lost the brightness of her
youth. At an age when the women of a higher culture are still at the
height of their charm and attractiveness the woman of the Huron had
degenerated into a shriveled hag, horrible to the eye and often
despicable in character. The inborn gentleness of womanhood had been
driven from her breast by ill-treatment. Not even the cruelest of
the warriors surpassed the unhallowed fiendishness of the withered
squaw in preparing the torments of the stake and in shrieking her
toothless exultation beside the torture fire.
Where women are on such a footing as this it is always ill with the
community at large. The Huron were among the most despicable of the
Indians in their manners. They were hideous gluttons, gorging
themselves when occasion offered with the rapacity of vultures.
Gambling and theft flourished among them. Except, indeed, for the
tradition of courage in fight and of endurance under pain we can
find scarcely anything in them to admire.
North and west from the Algonquins and Huron-Iroquois were the
family of tribes belonging to the Athapascan stock. The general
names of Chipewyan and Tinne are also applied to the same great
branch of the Indian race. In a variety of groups and tribes, the
Athapascan spread out from the Arctic to Mexico. Their name has
since become connected with the geography of Canada alone, but in
reality a number of the tribes of the plains, like the well-known
Apaches, as well as the Hupa of California and the Navahos, belong
to the Athapascan. In Canada, the Athapascan roamed over the country
that lay between Hudson Bay and the Rocky Mountains. They were found
in the basin of the Mackenzie river towards the Arctic sea, and
along the valley of the Fraser to the valley of the Chilcotin. Their
language was broken into a great number of dialects which differed
so widely that only the kindred groups could understand one
another's speech. But the same general resemblance ran through the
various branches of the Athapascan. They were a tall, strong race,
great in endurance, during their prime, though they had little of
the peculiar stamina that makes for long life and vigorous old age.
Their descendants of to-day still show the same facial
characteristics--the low forehead with prominent ridge bones, and
the eyes set somewhat obliquely so as to suggest, though probably
without reason, a kinship with Oriental peoples.
The Athapascan stood low in the scale of civilization. Most of them
lived in a prairie country where a luxuriant soil, not encumbered
with trees, would have responded to the slightest labor. But the
Athapascan, in Canada at least, knew nothing of agriculture. With
alternations of starvation and rude plenty, they lived upon the
unaided bounty of tribes of the far north, degraded by want and
indolence, were often addicted to cannibalism.
The Indians beyond the mountains, between the Rockies and the sea,
were for the most part quite distinct from those of the plains. Some
tribes of the Athapascan, as we have seen, penetrated into British
Columbia, but the greater part of the natives in that region were of
wholly different races. Of course, we know hardly anything of these
Indians during the first two centuries of European settlement in
America. Not until the eighteenth century, when Russian traders
began to frequent the Pacific coast and the Spanish and English
pushed their voyages into the North Pacific, the Tlingit of the far
north, the Salish, Tsimshian, Haida, Kwakiutl-Nootka and Kutenai. It
is thought, however, that nearly all the Pacific Indians belong to
one kindred stock. There are, it is true, many distinct languages
between California and Alaska, but the physical appearance and
characteristics of the natives show a similarity throughout.
The total number of the original Indian population of the continent
can be a matter of conjecture only. There is every reason, however,
to think that it was far less than the absurdly exaggerated figures
given by early European writers. Whenever the first explorers found
a considerable body of savages they concluded that the people they
saw were only a fraction of some large nation. The result was that
the Spaniards estimated the inhabitants of Peru at thirty millions.
Las Casas, the Spanish historian, said that Hispaniola, the present
Hayti, had a population of three millions; a more exact estimate,
made about twenty years after the discovery of the island, brought
the population down to fourteen thousand! In the same way Montezuma
was said to have commanded three million Mexican warriors--an
obvious absurdity. The early Jesuits reckoned the numbers of the
Iroquois at about a hundred thousand; in reality there seem to have
been, in the days of Wolfe and Montcalm, about twelve thousand. At
the opening of the twentieth century there were in America north of
Mexico about 403,000 Indians, of whom 108,000 were in Canada. Some
writers go so far as to say that the numbers of the natives were
probably never much greater than they are to-day. But even if we
accept the more general opinion that the Indian population has
declined, there is no evidence to show that the population was ever
more than a thin scattering of wanderers over the face of a vast
country. Mooney estimates that at the coming of the white man there
were only about 846,000 aborigines in the United States, 220,000 in
British America, 72,000 in Alaska, and 10,000 in Greenland, a total
native population of 1,148,000 from the Mississippi to the Atlantic.
The limited means of support possessed by the natives, their
primitive agriculture, their habitual disinclination to settled life
and industry, their constant wars and the epidemic diseases which,
even as early as the time of Jacques Cartier, worked havoc among
them, must always have prevented the growth of a numerous
population. The explorer might wander for days in the depths of the
American forest without encountering any trace of human life. The
continent was, in truth, one vast silence, broken only by the roar
of the waterfall or the cry of the beasts and birds of the forest.
This site includes some historical materials that
may imply negative stereotypes reflecting the culture or language of
a particular period or place. These items are presented as part of
the historical record and should not be interpreted to mean that the
WebMasters in any way endorse the stereotypes implied.
Chronicles of Canada, The Dawn Of Canadian
History, A Chronicle of Aboriginal Canada, 1915
Chronicles of Canada |