On the banks of the Damariscotta River in Maine are remarkable heaps of shells which rise, in some places, to the height of twenty-five feet, and consist almost entirely of huge oyster shells of from ten to fifteen inches in length. Fragments of pottery and bones of moose and of deer are also found in these curious heaps, and, at the bottom of one of the highest, has been discovered the remains of an ancient fireplace filled with human bones and pottery. Curiously enough, similar banks of shells are found in the St. John's River in Florida, at Grand Lake, on the lower Mississippi, and at San Pablo, Berkeley, and Alameda, in the Bay of San Francisco. Here oysters still exist, but in Maine they are found in such small numbers that it is no object to gather them. These mounds could only have been constructed by human hands, and, therefore, the belief is current that people of no mean order of intelligence inhabited America long before the coming of the first white men.

Whether the Mound Builders and shell-heap constructors were ancestors of the red men, it is difficult to say, at any rate the natives with whom the white race were soon to struggle for the possession of the Continent of North America were savage, cruel, vindictive and slothful. They could not adopt the ways of the white man. They could not learn to live by the plough instead of the hunting rifle; they could never see that houses were better to live in than frail wigwams in the forest, and so, in the end, the superior intelligence of the white man triumphed, the Indian was forced into reservations set apart for him and his race, and the country was populated by men of European descent.

In the long struggle for the possession of the land, several chiefs arose whose qualities of mind were superior to that of many of their contemporaries. The names of some of these stand out brightly upon the pages of history, and the records of their deeds and daring show that they were Indians who possessed a bravery quite equal to that of their enemies, even if their other qualities were inferior. Let us, therefore, glance at their illustrious names and learn what we can of their vain attempts to stem the unwithstandable advance of the white race.


CONTENTS

PAGE
[Powhatan: The Great Sachem of Virginia]1
[Opechancanough: The Scourge of Virginia]41
[Sassacus and Uncas: Rival Chieftains of the Pequot Rebellion]62
[Massasoit: The Great Sachem of the Wampanoags and Friend of the Puritans]79
[King Philip, or Metacomet]106
[Pontiac: The Red Napoleon]151
[Logan: The Mighty Orator and Warrior of the Mingoes]209
[Red Jacket, or Sa-go-ye-wat-ha: the Great Orator of the Senecas]230
[Captain Joseph Brant: The Warrior Chief of the Mohawks]254
[Little Turtle, or Michikiniqua: The Miami Conqueror of Harmar and St. Clair]284
[Tecumseh, "The Shooting Star:" Celebrated Shawanoe Diplomat, Orator and Soldier]309
[Weatherford: The Creek Conspirator and Fearless Fighter]338
[Black Hawk: Chief of the Sacs and Foxes and Leader of the Black Hawk Rebellion]353
[Osceola: The Snake of the Florida Everglades]368
[Roman Nose: The Custer of the Cheyennes]379
[Geronimo: The Terrible Apache]398
[Red Cloud: The Sioux Von Seydlitz]410
[Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse: General and Able Lieutenant of the Great Sioux Rebellion]425
[Conclusion]456

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

PAGE
[Sitting Bull] (See page 425)Frontispiece
[The Meeting of Massasoit and Governor Carver]86
[King Philip, or Metacomet]106
[Pontiac in Council]154
[Red Jacket, or Sa-go-ye-wat-ha]232
[Joseph Brant, or Thay-en-da-negea]264
[Little Turtle, or Michikiniqua]286
[Tecumseh]308
[Death of Tecumseh]337
[Black Hawk]356
[Osceola]368
[Roman Nose]380
[Geronimo]398
[Red Cloud]410
[American Horse]436
[Death of Sitting Bull]440