The author has sought to verify every statement that touches upon historical events. He has read or examined nearly all the books and pamphlets and many of the magazine articles formerly in the Astor and Lenox, now in the New York Public Library, dealing with Indian wars and customs. In numerous cases, narratives written by observers and participants have been available. He believes that all the border battles are described correctly, and the Indian songs, dances and customs are taken from the relations of witnesses.
But the great mass of material dealing with the frontier furnishes another striking illustration of the old saying that truth is stranger than fiction. No Indian story has ever told of danger and escape more marvelous than those that happened hundreds of times. The Indian character, as revealed in numerous accounts, is also a complex and interesting study. The same Indian was capable of noble actions and of unparalleled cruelty. As a forest warrior he has never been excelled. In the woods, fighting according to his ancient methods, he was the equal alike of Frenchman, Englishman and American, and often their superior. Many of the Indian chiefs were great men. They had the minds of statesmen and generals, and they prolonged, for generations, a fight that was doomed, from the beginning.
We lost more people in our Indian wars than in all the others combined, except the Civil War. More American soldiers fell at St. Clair's defeat by the Northwestern Indians than in any other battle we had ever fought until Bull Run. The British dead at Braddock's disaster in the American wilderness outnumbered the British dead at Trafalgar nearly two to one. So valiant a race has always appealed to youth, at least, as a fit subject of romance.
The long struggle with the brave and wary red men bred a type of white foresters who became fully their equals in the craft and lore of the wilderness. Such as these stood as a shield between the infant settlements and the fierce tribes, and, in this class, the author has placed his heroes.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
| chapter | page | |
| I. | [The Passing Fleet] | 1 |
| II. | [The Silver Bullet] | 16 |
| III. | [The Hot Spring] | 30 |
| IV. | [The Seven Heralds] | 39 |
| V. | [The Wyandot Council] | 51 |
| VI. | [The Ruined Village] | 63 |
| VII. | [The Taking of Henry] | 79 |
| VIII. | [The Northward March] | 96 |
| IX. | [At Detroit] | 109 |
| X. | [The Letter of the Four] | 126 |
| XI. | [The Cry from the Forest] | 143 |
| XII. | [The Canoe on the River] | 157 |
| XIII. | [On the Great Lake] | 173 |
| XIV. | [A Timely Rescue] | 188 |
| XV. | [The Pages of a Book] | 205 |
| XVI. | [The River Fight] | 226 |
| XVII. | [The Road to Wareville] | 241 |
| XVIII. | [The Shadowy Figure] | 265 |
| XIX. | [A Herald by Water] | 282 |
| XX. | [The Counter-Stroke] | 316 |
| XXI. | [The Battle of Piqua] | 336 |
| XXII. | [The Last Stand] | 359 |