A STORY OF INDIAN
MIGRATION
WEST TO EAST
900 A.D.
SCHARF
Ther was no written
language, but the inhabitants of the continent had wisdom and used a
series of painted sticks,
in various lenghts, each with inrtricate markings, known as Walum
Olum, to tell their history.
One of these stick stories
tells for the journey made by a nation of Indians, which became the
Lenapes or Delaware Indians, from a land beyond the Mississipi,
then known as the Father of Waters, left a place near the '
western sea' and made their way east. On the west shore of the
Mississippi they met another Indian nation , probably the Iroquois,
and the two banded together , more or less for safety and continued
the journey eastward. East of a river in the area now Illinoirs,
Indiana and Ohio, these tribes met with a much larger nation named
Allegwi, superior in numbers and armaments , with fortified
villages, and were more sophisticated, thought of being here since
900 A.D.
At first the Allegwi allowed both
the Lenape and Iroquois to enter their nation and when totally
enveloped, made attacks which took great tolls on the travelers.
However, the two tribes rallied and conquered
the Allgwi.
Continuing the journey, as
the approached now Pennsylvania, the Lenape kept south while the
Irroquois went north. The
Lenape, upon reaching “Lenape Wihittuck , the Delaware River,
dispursed,
some moving into New york
and New Jersey, and other moving into southeast Pennsylvania and the
peninsula of Delmarvva.
Source: Dick Carters
History of Sussex County, Delaware Coast Press, July 1976. Abstract
Harrison H, September 10, 2017.
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