TEN INDIAN CHIEFS SMOKE
PEACE PIPE
DELAWARE, MARYLAND AND
VIRGINIA TRIBES
GATHER AT INDIAN RIVER
By
William Christie MacLoud
of
University of Pennsylvania
Oak Orchard, Indian River,
Delaware December 10, 1923
Within the Delmarva area
there are mounds built by ancient Indian inhabitants and descendents
of the people who built them still live in the neighborhood where
they are found. The region lays along the Indian River near
Millsboro. A party of scientist from the University of Pennsylvania
of Philadelphia have began digging in these mounds to study the
descendent of their builders. This group also plans to spend
Thanksgiving week end enjoying the hospitality of these Indians and
other Indians who come from all over the United States to attend a
great Council Fire.
The mounds built by the
Nanticoke Indians are of a very curious origin. The tribe held the
Eastern Shore of Maryland and Delaware to the Indian river and west
to the Susquehanna River. It is known that these Indians, ever since
they were discovered by John Smith in 1608 mummified their Kings or
Chiefs after death just as did the Egyptians. To mummify a body the
insides were cut our and buried and the corpse filled with herbs and
spices, then smoked dried over a sacred fire, then placed in a
Kiocasan, a temple so to speak, in which stood an Idol of Kiocas,
where they remained until the temple was full.
What happened to the mummies
after the temple became crowded? This is why the scientist are
doing the study and the mounds being examined. It is the thinking
that the mounds cover the temples and remains of the Nanticoke
Indians. The scientist need to move carefully and work slowly. They
have been dug into only about ten feet so far. No skeletons have
been recovered but spearheads, tomahawks, arrow heads and pottery
have been dug out.
Members of the Pennsylvania
Department of Anthropology attending this Council were Dr. Frank
Gouldersmith Speck, his wife , A. Irvin Hallowell, instructor, A. R.
Davidson, student, Yale Nathan, student and W. C. MacLoud.
The visiting Indian Chiefs
gathered at the Nanticoke settlement are from the remnants of the
tribe of the great Powhaten Confederacy which when John Smith
landed in Virginia in 1608 were under the Emperor Powhatan who ruled
a territory eight thousand miles in extent and whose influence
reached the Nanticoke Tribe on Delaware shores.
Todays chief of the
confederacy , Chief Tomacoma, or A. R. Nelson, whichever you wish,
is also Chief of the Rappahannock of Tappahannock Indians, and
twentieth century successor of Emperor Powhaten.
Chief Nantacuus or B. T.
Atkins, whichever you wish, is chief of the Chiekahoming Indians,
Chief Wahauganoche, aka T. L. Bass, chief of the Nassumund tribe, who
live below the Great Dismal Swamp
of Virginia,
Tribal Councilors present
were Chief Namuacus , aka A. L Clarke, of the Rappahannock Indians,
andchief Tap-ha-cope, aka N. C. Bass, of the Nansumunds. Chief
Pahamencoot , head of the Pamunkey Tribe was unable to come due to
illness. The host of the Ccouncil was Chief Wyniaco, aka, R. H.
Clarke.
From the far away Ojibway
Tribe of the west came Chief Strongwolf, who served in the World War
I, enlisting in an Canadian regiment in 1914. From the Mohican Tribe
of Connecticut came Princess Gladys Tantequidgeon lineal descendant
of Indian Chief Uncas, who was friends to the Puritans, and ate at
the first American Thanksgiving in the 1600's. Princess Madacanna,
Jannie Harmon, of the Nanticoke Tribe was host to the Connecticut
Princess.
War Paint and Feathers
The Tuesday night prior to
Thanksgiving Day most of the Virginia Chiefs were dressed in their
every day ordinary cloths. On Wednesday the Pennsylvania University
people arrived as did more Indians and the settlement was crowded
with Indians in War paint and Dance paint, feathers and ancient
costumes of the various tribes. They must have numbered well over
six hundred.
That morning the Council of
the Confederacy was held and routine business transacted. Plans were
laid
to furthering the cause of
Indians who even today meet with injustice. At one thirty a Great
Council Fire was built and the chiefs of the tribes smoked the pipe
of peace and made welcoming addresses to the settlement and its white
visitors. After a turkey feast which was enjoyed by all, and spirits
ran high, a dance was held in the council house. Chief Strongwolf of
the Ojibway opened the danceing with the Dance of the Snake followed
by an hour long weird war dance to the beating of ten wild tom-toms
. Indian songs and feasting followed, the scalp dance, the dancers
painted and feathered, crying a wild war whoop , winding out of the
Council House along the pine shadowed river and back.
Friday morning the Council
Fire was blackened and the Indians in a much quieter mood. After
another turkey feast the Council gathered to consider a most
important question laid before them. The Indian Tribes since the
1641 war with whites, had never been permitted to socialize with the
whites. This did not trouble them until compulsory state public
education came about. The Indians refused to attend the schools they
were told to attend and built their own schools and paid their own
teachers. It must be noted they had their own churches too. It was
noted that governments were passing bills allowing states to build
and endow schools for the Powhatan Confederacy.
The evening following the
council another banquet was held outdoors for hundreds of Indians
in war paint and feathers. A Place of Honor was given to the two
beautiful Indian Princesses , Princess Madacama of the Nanticokes and
Princess Tantequidgeon of the Connecticut Mohican Tribe. The
Rappahannock Chief chanted to the beat of ten tom-toms , in true
Indian manner, a poem dedicated to the two charming girls.
Late that night when the
most of the virginia Indians had left, the pale face group from
Pennsylvania decided to go on a coon hunt. As we had not made any
previous preparations we could find only one dog, a red one, with no
idea what the excitement was about and we thought he would never tree
a coon.
We were surprised however,
when the evening was saved, when the red dog treed a cat and it was
voted that the coon hunt was a success.
A Country Full of Romance
The country side which held
the Powhaten Confederate Council of Tribes this year is one of
beauty and romance. The Indian village that is now the present
Nanticoke Settlement was the northern most
of the Nanticoke villages
and marked the north limits of the Powhaten empire. At Lewes on
Delaware, only a few miles north, was the village of Sieonnese, the
southernmost of the Delaware Indians. The region between Cape
Henlopen and Indian River was neutral, neither Delaware Indians nor
Nanticoke claimed it, The Delaware and Nanticoke Indian were often
at war with each other. In 1630 a Dutch Colony purchased Indian land
and built a settlement which was soon destructed by an Indian
disagreements.
Indian lore tells that the
area was covered by great flocks of pigeons that would obscure the
sun, the woods were full of the Carolina Parokeet, whales ascended
the Delaware river and at time to the west were found herds of
buffalo.
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