Vessels and utensils were made of wood or clay, ladles from a section of the buffalo skull. Fire was produced by the hand drill in the usual manner.
The cabin type seems to have varied at different periods or in different tribes. In early times, cabins had rectangular floors and vaulted (barrel-shaped) roofs. They were roofed and floored with “double-mats” of flat rushes and were impervious to wind or rain. Occasionally they were erected on low mounds (two feet high) to keep the floors dry. Large cabins of the vaulted type had four fires, with one or two families at a fire.
Bark-covered hemispherical huts or wigwams may have been used on hunting trips. They were apparently common in some villages in 1723.
Overland travel was on foot. On streams the [dugout] boat was propelled by pole and possibly by paddle. Large boats were 40 to 50 feet long, capable of carrying 40 to 50 men. While dugouts were admirably suited for travel and trade between the Illini tribes along the Illinois and [Mississippi] rivers, they were, on account of their weight and unwieldiness in portaging, generally useless in raids against enemies.
Fig. 33. Native Illini [artifacts]. A, Indian-made gun [flint]; B, C, D, chipped flint [arrowheads]; E, flint scraper; F, grooved abrader of sandstone; G, expanded base drill (grip only, point broken off); H, I, polished [stone] pendants. From Illini village site near mouth of Kaskaskia River, Randolph County.
Marriage Customs and the [Family]
An Illini man, desiring to get married, sent presents to the girl’s parents. If the suitor was acceptable, the parents kept the gift and took the bride to the man’s hut the following evening. Apparently there was no wedding ceremony.
Women had somewhat lower social [status] than their husbands. Wives did not eat with their husbands. A man was permitted two or more wives and often married two sisters. Children were well-treated. Infants were bound to a cradle board that the mother carried around. The cradle was pointed at the lower end and was stuck in the ground when the woman wanted to rest. Divorce was accomplished by a simple agreement to separate.