[Pg. 131]
FRENCH AND ENGLISH TRADERS
The mouth of the Cuyahoga,
was a point of too much consequence among the Indians, not to bring
traders here at a very early day. Between 1700 and 1750, the
French extended their forts and trading posts, to all points on the
waters of the lakes and of the Ohio river. In the last named
year they had a fort at Sandusky, and in 1755 a trading house on the
Cuyahoga, opposite the mouth of Tinker's creek.
JAMES SMITH,
of Pennsylvania, spent the winter of 1755 - 6 on the "Cayahoga," not
as a trader, but as a prisoner among the Delawares. He left a
narrative of ihs captivity, in which the country watered by the
Cuyahoga, the Black, and the Kilbuck rivers, is fully described.
From 1760 to 1764, MARY CAMPBELL,
a young girl captured in Pennsylvania, lived on this river, most of
the time near the foot of the falls, at the forks below Akron.
After the British took possession in 1760, French and
English traders continued together, to traffic
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with the Indians on the waters of lake Erie. No doubt a post
was kept up, at some point or points on the river during a large
part of the eighteenth century, but such establishments are so
slight and temporary, that they are seldom noticed noticed in
history. A trading house is a very transient affair. A
small log cabin covered with bark, constituted all of what is
designated as an establishment. If the Indian customers
remove, the trader follows them; abandons his cabin, and constructs
another at a more convenient place. Within a year the deserted
hut is burned to the ground, and all that remains is a vacancy of an
acre or two in the forest, covered with grass, weeds, briers and
bushes.
In 1786 a lively trade in furs is known to have been
carried on here. Of the energetic half civilized men, who for
so many generations carried on this business, we know personally
nothing; except i regard to JOSEPH
DU
SHATTAR and some of his companions.
Mr. EBENEZER MERRY, of
Milan, Huron County, Ohio, in 1842 had a conversation with Judge S.
A. ABBEY, in which stated that he had
known DU SHATTAR.
He had from a youth been in the employ of the North-West Fur
Company, along this lake. The mouth of the Cuyahoga and
Sandusky, were principal points. About 1790 he married MARY
PORNAY, at Detroit, and commenced trading on
his own account. He had a post nine miles up the river, which
is probably the one whose
[Pg. 133]
remains have been observed in Brooklyn, opposite Newburg.
Here his second child was born in 1794. JOHN
BAPTISTE FLEMMING and
JOSEPH
BURRALL were with him a part of the time.
While he was a Sandusky one of his voyageurs, by the name of BEAULIEAU
appropriated the wife of an Indian. This proceeding, and the
continued presence of fire-water gave rise to frequent quarrels.
Their establishment at Sandusky was attacked by the Indians, in
order to rescue BEAULIEAU'S squaw, and many
goods were seized. The remainder were saved by a compromise
effected with rum.
On the Cuyahoga, a fight occurred with the Indians in
reference to a rifle. The Indians attacked them at another
time, intending to capture their spirits, to obtain which they will
risk whatever they possess. Some of the savages were killed
and the remainder retreated. A trader was killed on the lake
shore about ten miles below Grand river. DU
SHATTAR was living in 1812, and assisted in
capturing JOHN O'MIC and
SEMO, on Locust Point, the murderers of MICHAEL
GIBBS and DANIEL
BUELL
at Pipe creek, near Sandusky. <
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