Friday, September 13, 2013

Miami Indian Battle in Noble County, Indiana

Miami Indian Battle in Noble County, Indiana 

Late in the summer of 1895 Mr. W. A. Kuhn, of Albion, told me of the existence 
of mounds and of the discovery of a large number of bones, skulls, etc., in a
 peninsula formed by a sharp northeast bend of the Elkhart river, in section 16,  York township. The excavation
took place in 1842, Mr. Kuhn, then a youth of eighteen years, being a participant in
 the work.  An Indian trail, deeply worn and running from Lake Wawassee northeastward toward Mongo-
 quinong, crossed the river at the bend, where there was a fording place. A little  
southwest of  the point where the trail on the Eversole farm crossed the river certain 
peculiarities of  formation in some of the mounds suggested artificial work and led to 
excavation.   The result, as above stated, was the uncovering of many human skulls and other  parts of  human frames. 
    On exposure to the air most of the hones crumbled to  dust, but some retained 
their forms long enough to show a physician and anatomist of the party, Dr. W. H.  
Ninmon, that they belonge to a race different from the European, and probably to 
aborigines or Indians. Everything about the place indi- cated that it was not an ordinary 
burial ground: Together   with the great number of stone implements of war — arrow and 
spearheads,    fragments of  hatchets, and war- clubs — found at different times in the 
vicinity, the trail and ford commanded on either side of the riser by morainic bluffs, 
all told of a savage battle of a past century, long  anterior to the advent of civilized men. 
    Here, at this strategic point, the warriors of the Denizen tribe, probably the  
Miami, met the southward advance of invading foes, who crossed in the face of strong 
resistance and a bloody battle raged on the southern bank, the Miamis lighting desperately
for their ancient homes and hunting grounds; the fierce northern hordes for possession of a
richer country in a  milder climate than their own, the sterile and stormy north and northwest. Such incursions 
are historic. About two hundred and fifty years ago an avalanche of Chippewas,
 Winnebagos,  Sacs and Foxes and Pottawatomies descended upon northern Illinois and Indiana, the beautiful country of the Minnewas, or Miamis, whose ancestral possessions stretched 
from   the Scioto to the Mississippi, and from the St. Joseph valley in southern Michigan to 
the Ohio  river, in- habited by peaceful tribes of the common Minnewa stock, of whom the
 Miamis   were the parent and ruling family, with the capital    home at Ke'-ki-on-ga 
Fort Wayne). 

Gruesome stories of Indian capture and torture