Big Bear's Den
Image of Shawnee Warrior from Osprey Men-At-Arms "American Woodland Indians" By M.G. Johnson Color Plates by R.Hook
ALL ABOUT THE SHAWNEE
SHAWNEE HISTORY 2
SHAWNEE HISTORY 3
PORTRAYING INDIANS
THE CAPTIVE CORPS
TURTLE ISLAND
WIKTIONARY
WIKIPEDIA
BOONESBORO VILLAGE
CAMP DANIEL BOONE
CDB VIDEO
DANIEL BOONE COUNCIL
Camp Daniel Boone is a Boy Scout Camp located in the Great Smoky Mountains ~ 45 minutes west of Asheville, NC.
* WANTED!!!! *
* Young Person/16 plus/Male or Female For *
* “Paid Vacation” Plus All Expenses *
* 8 - 9 weeks /June 4 to ~ August 1, 2010 *
*Camp Daniel Boone near Asheville, NC. Chance to see Biltmore Estate & Cherokee*
* Must Have valid Drivers License and a RELIABLE VEHICLE *
* Truck or Van preferred but not necessary *
* Boy Scout Camp Councilor/Stroke Survivor Needs Driver/Personal Assistant *
* If you can teach an Indian Craft, much more pay is possible. *
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This page will take us through the Revolution up to 1799,
a period of extreme change for the entire Native community
and great hardship for most all of them living east of the Mississippi.

Cornstalk continued to keep the peace even into the early days of the Revolution. The younger members of the Shawnee that wished to prove themselves in battle and those that had a great hatred for the whites for past wrongs, had other ideas. Encouraged and supplied by the British, they began a new campaign against the frontier settlements.
Many of the tribes remained neutral. Many others were persuaded by the British that the Americans intended to take all their land from them, something the tribes no trouble believing, and “took up the hatchet” against the trespassers. Recruited to the British cause were tribes from Detroit; the Saginaw and Mackinac Ojibwe or Anishinaabe, St. Joseph Potawatomi or Bodéwademi and Mingo, War factions among the Chickamauga Cherokee and the Shawnee joined in this alliance, as well.
The Chickamauga attacked two frontier forts in the Carolinas in July of 1776. This provoked an American retaliation against all of the Cherokee. Chickamauga and Shawnee war parties continued to attack settlements through Kentucky and the Ohio River Valley. 
Because of their attachment to Sir William Johnston, the Mohawk had sided with the British from the very beginning. Until the rest of the Iroquois were drawn into the fray in 1777, the Confederation demanded that the Shawnee cease and desist. By this time the Iroquois had no expectation of anyone paying heed. The British, through Detroit and Lt. Governor Henry Hamilton, began buying scalps from the tribes including those of women and children. This further inflamed both sides. What the British never seemed to understand, was that the Shawnee and most of the other tribes needed no encouragement to attack American settlements and doing things like buying the scalps of women and children only recruited more Americans to the cause of Revolution. One must understand that the colonists were divided by thirds on the issue of Revolution; 1/3 for it, 1/3 against it and 1/3 could care less. Most of the latter group lived on the frontier. It was actions like those of “Hamilton the Hair Buyer” that began to change the minds of many Americans.

In July of 1776 a small battle took place in Kentucky. A Shawnee and Chickamauga Cherokee war party captured 14-year-old Jemima Boone, daughter of Daniel Boone, and two of her friends. Boone and a posse chased them for three days. The girls were rescued after a heated contest.
By this time Cornstalk had lost all control over the war faction of the Shawnee. In 1777, Cornstalk and his son went to Ft. Randolph at Point Pleasant to warn the Americans that the Shawnee were joining the British. The American response was to take Cornstalk and his son as hostages. Later, after a white man was killed, this imprisoned and unarmed old man and his son were murdered as an act of revenge.
Chiungalla, or “Black Fish”, Daniel Boone’s adoptive father, became successor to Hokoleskwa or "Cornstalk" as he was known to the whites. Now the Shawnee as a whole came into action, as Chiungalla hated the white man with a passion. Raids into Kentucky, western Maryland and Pennsylvania and even into Appalachian Virginia, intensified. Soon St. Asaph's, aka Logan's Fort, Harrodsburg and Boonesborough were the only American towns left in the Ohio River watershed. Those settlers that were left either had returned to the east or were holed up in the few remaining forts in the area. Even the forts were not necessarily safe. 
In September, Ft. Henry (Wheeling, WV.) was attacked by 400 Mingo, Wyandot and Shawnee. Approximately 21 of the 42 men manning this frontier outpost were killed outright, with several more wounded before re-enforcements arrived. Before the war party withdrew, they raised the nearby settlement to the ground.
General Edward Hand and an army of Pennsylvanians marched out of Ft. Pitt on a raid to punish the Ohio tribes in February of 1778. Hand never caught any of tribe’s warriors. He did destroy two villages of peaceful Lenape, including killing many women and children, in what became known as his “Squaw Campaign." This “campaign” almost brought the neutral Lenape into the fight within the British sphere. Hand was allowed to resigned and General Lachlan McIntosh took his place. Ft. Randolph was attacked by 300 Shawnee and Wyandot warriors led by Blackfish and Tanacharison (known to the Whites as Half King), seeking to avenge the murder of Cornstalk. The soldiers at Ft. Randolph, under orders of their commander, refused to come out and fight. The Shawnee were accustomed to fighting out in the open and were frustrated by the fact that this enemy wouldn’t. They kept the fort under siege for a week, a long time by any Indian standards. Chiungalla and Tanacharison then decided to leave Ft. Randolph to raid settlements in the Greenbrier area up the Kanawha River. Daniel Boone had been captured by the Shawnee in February. Chiungalla had declined to deliver him to the British as was the custom. Normally the British would pay large bounties for officers and people as noteworthy as Boone. Chiungalla offered to adopt Boone. Boone accepted and became the son of a Shawnee chief. Boone learned of an attack on Boonesborough and ran away from his new family.

At Ft. Pitt, a scout named Simon Girty, defected to the British when he became convinced that the Americans would lose the war. Girty was soon leading war parties of the Ohio tribes. He became one of the American’s most “savage” enemies. (It takes a white man to give the Indians a valid reputation as “savages.”)
The attack finally came in September. As Shawnee warriors besieged Boonesborough for nine-days, Chiungalla stood within ear shot of the walls and scolded Boone for his betrayal and plain “Bad Manners” to his adopted people.
In spite of the "Squaw Campaign" of General Hand, in September the Lenape presented themselves at Ft. Pitt to sign a treaty of “Friendship and Alliance” They agreed to an American fort to be built on the Tuscarawas in Ohio. The fort was built to "protect them from the British." They were asked to join an expedition to capture Detroit. This they declined. The Americans were suspicious at the lack of cooperation. The Americans were escorting the Lenape to the site of the new fort when they murdered the head chief , White Eyes. Ft. Lauren’s had siege laid to it by White Eyes’ Ghost. January of 1779 saw a troop of Americans put upon by a Simon Girty and Mingo war party. February saw 18 soldiers attacked and killed within sight of the fort. The Wyandot and Mingo assailants laid siege to the fort and kept it cut off until relived a month later. 5 months later, in August of 1779, the fort was deserted because the Americans were unable to defend it.
In August of 1778, George Rogers Clark captured Vincennes and Kaskaskia, British out posts from where they had been supplying the tribes with arms and ammunition. It was a campaign which showed the determination of the American cause, overcoming great hardship to reach the posts at all. In December of that same year, the British, with the help of the Michigan tribes counter-attacked and re-captured Ft. Sackville (Vincennes). Clark counter-counter-attacked and retook the post and many prisoners. British prisoners were spared and sent east. The Indians were all bound and tomahawked to death.
Seeking revenge for all these “unprovoked” attacks, the Kentuckians under the leadership of John Bowman, with 300 mounted volunteers, attacked “Old Chillicothe”, burned it to the ground and killed Tanacharison. The Shawnee relocated from the Scioto river to the Mad river north of their previous site.
The Whites, still having their need for revenge unsated, rejected the request for peace from the Shawnee and Wyandot. They then attacked a group of Indians which turned out to be friendly Lenape on their way to Philadelphia to meet with the Congress.
The last of the Piqua and Kispoko left for Louisiana and the protection of the Spanish. This left the Mackujay and Chillicothe septs as the only Shawnee for “HOMELAND DEFENSE AGAINST the TERRORISTS.”
In the spring of 1780, the British planned an offensive into the Ohio and Mississippi River Valleys to capture the entire area.
Captain Henry Bird, leaving Detroit in April with 600 warriors, arrived in Ohio with over 1,200. They set about burning every American settlement and killing every American they could find, man, woman or child. This lasted throughout the summer. Not to be outdone, in August Clark attacked the Shawnee villages on the Mad River . Clark set his new record in mercy by taking a total of seven prisoners.

Atrocity and revenge, revenge and atrocity; the pattern continued throughout 1781. Daniel Brodhead with a group of vigilantes (aka militia), in the spring of 1782, burned the Lenape main town of Coshocton. , The men were executed by tomahawk. Women and children were taken prisoner. When the Shawnee called a council of war at New Chillicothe in June, every tribe in Ohio showed up as none were left neutral.
During the summer, war parties, ravaged Kentucky and western Pennsylvania. Many of these raids were led by Simon Girty. In August, George Rogers Clark was recruiting men for a campaign to capture Ft. Detroit. The contingent of Pennsylvania militia, that Clark was expecting to join him, was attacked near where the Miami and Ohio Rivers meet (present day Cincinnati) by Iroquois and British loyalists led by the Thayendanegea, known to the Whites as the Mohawk Joseph Brant. Thayendanega waited to ambush Clark as well. Clark evaded the trap and reached Fort Nelson (Louisville). Detroit stayed British until they just finally withdrew 13 years later, in 1795.
Pennsylvania militia massacred “90 praying Indians” (Moravian Lenape) at Gnadenhuetten (Ohio), who, because of their religion had remained neutral. This event occurred in March of 1782 and gave the Lenape just cause for revenge.
In June, a two day battle against the villages on the Sandusky of both Lenape and Wyandot, in northern Ohio, an American force was defeated. Colonel William Crawford, the American commander, captured by the Wyandot, was turned over to the Lenape to deal with as they pleased. While being taunted by Simon Girty, the Lenape burned Crawford at the stake. Crawford had been George Washington‘s personal friend. Girty led another raid against Kentucky in August. Bryan's Station was the target this time. When pursued by Kentucky militia after the raid, Girty set up an ambush at Blue Licks on the Licking River. Daniel Boone's son, Israel, was one of 60 killed.
Hannastown, Pennsylvania was burned by the Mingo. In October, for a second time, a war party of 300 men attacked Fort Henry. November saw Clark with a force of 1,100 mounted riflemen, defeat the Shawnee, burning New Chillicothe and five other villages.
With the signing of the Treaty of Paris in 1783, the Revolutionary War ended. Once again, “THE INDIAN PROBLEM” went unaddressed and the war between the Ohio tribes and Long Knives continued. There was a tremendous amount of hypocrisy in the British request that their allies stop their attacks on the Americans. In the manner of the French before them, the British continued resolving intertribal disputes while encouraging an intra-tribal alliance to hold the Americans out of the Northwest Territories. On the sly, the British provided arms to the Ohio tribes from forts they continued to hold in violation of the peace treaty.
The tribes and the Americans had old scores to settle. Great Britain and the United States had signed a peace treaty. The Americans felt this changed nothing between them and the Shawnee. While each party sized up the other, the fighting stopped, but only temporarily .
In 1783, at Sandusky, the Northwest alliance was formed. While the British did not actually attend, they sent the Thayendanaga from Canada which was even better still. Alliance members visited Detroit and were given assurances support from the British . The Shawnee hosted the alliances first council fire at Wakatomica. Burned by the Americans in 1787, the council fire was moved to Sindathon's village (Brownstown), a Wyandot village just south of Detroit. The treaty ending the Revolution gave the Ohio Valley to the United States. It said nothing about Indians living there.
In 1784, needing land to settle Revolutionary War debts by the sale there of, the government of the newly formed nation prevailed upon the defeated Iroquois to sign a reiteration of the Ft Stanwix Treaty of 1768. In the first treaty, the Iroquois had given up all claims to the Ohio Valley, to which there claim was rather dubious to begin with.
In this, both the original owners and the government were losers. There were already over 12,ooo “squatters” living north of the Ohio who had not paid anyone for the land. Like the British after the Proclamation of 1763 establishing a line over which settlers could not cross, the American army could not stop the flow of “illegal immigrants.” The government wanted only “paying customers” settling in the Old Northwest Territories and, therefore, decided to deal with each tribe individually and only with “Chiefs” they could control. At Ft. McIntosh in January of 1785, a treaty was “negotiated” with the Lenni Lanape, the Ojibwe, Odawa and Wyandot. These “Chiefs” put their marks to a treaty releasing all soverignty to the United States of all lands west to the Cuyahoga, Tuscarawas and Muskingum Rivers. The United States then sold the rights to resell the land to a consortium of New Jersey businessmen and the Ohio Company jointly.
Moluntha of the Mekoche Shawnee, under duress, signed a similar treaty at Ft. Finney one year later. Known as the Greater Miami treaty, none of the signatories were really speaking for their people. Many of the warriors of the union of the Ohio tribes wanted the Ohio River as the boundary between them and the Americans. Their chiefs had allowed the boundary to be set at the Muskingum. The American citizenry wanted the entire Ohio River Valley.
Most of the Shawnee wanted to continue the fight under the leadership of Blacksnake. In the spring the Iroquois convened a council at Buffalo Creek, New York, to stave of the coming conflict. None of the Ohio alliance showed up. A couple of months later, in July, a few delegates did show up to the next council fire the Iroquois convened only to ask for the League’s assistance in the coming war. While the Iroquois were hesitant, the British at Ft. Detroit endorsed the idea whole heartedly.
In the spring of 1786, there was still a large French population on the Wabash River at Vincennes. Among them, some 400 Americans had settled against the wishes of their government. The Kickapoo and Miami had already had several run ins with the Americans. A large contingent of Ohio Indians showed up in Vincennes. They announced to the French that they were there to kill every single American living at Vincennes. The French, tired of British deceit in dealing with both themselves and the Americans, protected the Americans by going through the motions of negotiating, giving the Americans time to fort up. The Americans also sent out a messenger to Kentucky to get the militia to come to their relief. In the fall, George Rogers Clark and the Kentucky militia arrived.
Interesting Fact - You ever noticed how all the ‘bad guys’ always have 3 names; John Wilkes Booth, Lee Harvey Oswald, George Rogers Clark. That’s a really, really biased, Shawnee point of view.
True to form, almost immediately, half of the militia quit and went home. Clark, unflappable as always, sent a small force, to Kaskaskia to arrest someone he thought to be a Spanish agent posing as a British trader. Clark, on the verge of starting a war with Great Britain for arresting one of their citizens, with Spain for accusing them of spying and the Indians just because, was reigned in by Josiah Harmer, the American the military commander of the region. Harmer order him to disband his army and return to Kentucky.
The Overhill Cherokee, come to be known as the Chickamauga, had been expelled from the lowlands of western Tennessee to the Ohio by southern Americans. (Irony abounds. Indians are being chased out of the south to northern lands only to have to fight battles to keep from being driven west.) The Chickamauga joined the alliance now consisting of the Canadian Mohawk (those that had been driven out of New York by the Revolution, having backed the British), the Wyandot, Kickapoo, Odawa, Ojibwe, Potawatomi, Fox, Sauk, (the last two coming to be known as one tribe and always referred to as the “Fox & Sauk”), Mascouten, Lenni Lenape, and, of course, the Shawnee.
Theyendanaga (Joseph Brant), who had held rank as a British officer during the Revolution, was able to get everyone to coalesce around the idea of the Ohio River and its eastern origins as the boundary between the Americans and themselves. The council also decided on a truce until spring to see if these demands would be accepted by the American Congress. If they received a negative response or no response by spring, they would begin raiding again. This message did not even reach Congress until sometime in July and, of course, the raids had already begun again.
The terror campaign began with several attacks on Kentucky settlements by the Chickamauga, Mingo and our trusty Shawnee.
In retaliation, Colonel Benjamin Logan, unleashed the wrath of the Kentuckians on two villages of Shawnee that had not joined the alliance. Mequachke and Wakatomica, the home of Molunthy (the only Shawnee chief to have signed the Ft. Finney treaty.) In fact, Logan killed Molunthy while he was still clutching that same treaty in his hand. The Shawnee, once again, moved their villages to the northern beginnings of the Miami River.
Arthur St. Clair , the American governor, requested a meeting with representatives of the alliance at Ft. Harmar to set a new boundary for American encroachment into Ohio.
The alliance almost completely fell apart. It was deeply divided over whether or not to accept the new terms establishing the Muskingum River as the new boundary. The war faction included the Wabash, Miami. Shawnee, and Theyendanaga of the Mohawk. He demanded complete repudiation of all treaties that had given up any of the Ohio lands. Brant left in a huff when the Wyandot decided to attend the council with St. Clair.
The alliance continued to be divided all through 1788. In July, while building the council house at Ft. Harmer, American soldiers were attacked by a war party of Odawa and Ojibwe An army convoy was ambushed by the Kickapoo near the mouth of the Wabash. The Americans were furious, but the Lenape, Potawatomi, and Detroit tribes were finally convinced by the Wyandot to join them at the conference.
This new agreement, signed at Fort Harmar in January of 1789, was a last ditch attempt by both parties to settle the dispute peaceably. The Muskingum was established as the boundary. The Shawnee not at the conference. The Wyandot promised to drive them out of Ohio if they broke the peace. The Wyandot could not have been expecting to do this. Half the alliance was ignoring this new treaty and they knew the Americans were planning to take all of Ohio anyway.
The War Party had firm control of the alliance. The Americans knew they had better act fast but they had not anticipated the strength of the alliance. Several campaigns against the northern Ohio villages provided the Americans with some hard lessons on the abilities of the “savages.” In October of 1790, on the northern Wabash (near present day Ft. Wayne, Indiana), a force of Americans under the command of Col. Josiah Harmer was met by the Miami war chief, Little Turtle, and a force of 2,ooo alliance members in a brilliantly executed ambush. One year later, the Americans were handed a defeat that made the “massacre” of Custer’s 7th Cavalry at the Little Big Horn look like a stroll through the park. In western Ohio, Arthur St. Clair suffered 600 of his soldiers killed outright with another 400 wounded in what would go down in history as the greatest victory for a Native force over the Americans. President Washington then sent “Mad Anthony Wayne” (he was such a villain that the Americans gave him his 3rd name themselves) west. Wayne took up a post at Ft. Washington, present day Cincinnati. There he began training his army of a combined force of backwoods militia and regulars that came to be known as “Wayne’s Legion.” Wayne, also, had his Legion begin building a line of forts northward to support his campaign against the alliance.
These preparations began to unnerve and unravel the alliance. As food became scarce the Sauk and Fox went home. A second campaign against Wabash villages had caught most of the men away. Many women and children ended up as hostages in Kentucky. In 1792, threatening to kill all their hostages, the Americans forced the Wabash Miami and Kickapoo to sign a treaty and pull out of the alliance.
The alliance council was held on the Auglaize near the present city of Defiance, Ohio in October of 1792. They met with delegates of the American government to discuss peace yet once again. The Americans said they wanted it. The Indians knew that the only peace they would get would be at the expense of all of their land. Theyendanaga and the British argued for a continuation of hostilities, but then it wasn’t their land. Some of the elder chiefs argued for peace as they were weary of war. The Shawnee captured and killed two of the American representatives as they were coming down the Ohio to that very conference, thereby making their opinions known. Approximately eight months later, in the summer of 1793, the peace process was initiated yet once again. The government had persuaded Hendrick Aupamut, a Stockbridge Indian,(remnants of the Housatonic tribe that had migrated out of New York and settled at Stockbridge, Massachusetts where they had been converted) to speak on behalf of peace. Being of the same stock as the Lenapi, they offered their protection to the delegation.
The talks broke down again. No agreement was reached.
President Washington ordered “Mad Anthony” to begin operations in Ohio in October of 1793. Little Turtle hit and killed virtually every one of the early supply trains at Ludlow Springs. Wayne moved his headquarters 80 miles north of Cincinnati to Fort Greenville . In the spring of 1794, as a countermeasure to the American advance, the British built Ft. Miami on the Maumee at the falls .
The alliance thought this was a sign of supporting their cause but British King and Parliament had already planned to settle up things with the Americans. Wayne began building more forts to support his advance. The Shawnee tried an attack on one of those forward instillations, Ft. Recovery, with no success. The Americans continued their advance towards the villages on the Maumee.
Little Turtle advocated a careful approach to the American advance at the council on August 13 of 1794. He was overruled by a consensus of the council who had been influenced by the debate of Weyapiersenwah , the Shawnee war chief. The whites knew him as Bluejacket. The council voted to follow Bluejacket. Little Turtle was out and Bluejacket was in as the new alliance war chief. On August 2oth of 1794, one of the most famous battles of Indians against the Americans that became known as “The Battle of Fallen Timbers,” along the Maumee River in present-day Maumee, Ohio, not far from present-day Toledo, Ohio.
Wayne’s Legion stood at more than 4,600 men, with a few Chickasaw andChoctaw scouts.
Blue Jacket and Buckongahelas, the Lenape war chief, led an army of only 700 Shawnee plus an unknown number of Lenape, Ojibwas, Odawas, Mingos, Potawatomis, Wyandots, the Miamis, led by Little Turtle, and even a few white militia, under Captain Alexander McKillop, that had come down from Canada to lend a hand. The total of the army numbered 1,500. The Indian army hid among the “fallen timbers” that had been leveled by a heavy storm with extremely high, straight line winds. They reckoned that the trees would form a natural abatis and slow down the advance of the Legion, if they came. Nearby was Ft. Miami, a British outpost from which the Indian alliance had been receiving supplies. The battle began with a devastating ambush of the Legion which the Indians took full advantage of, pressing the Americans back in a straight line. The battle was going well for the severely out numbered Indians until the legion’s cavalry out flanked them. The battle did not last long. The British commander was not authorized to start a war with the Americans, even though the British had been encouraging the Indians to do their dirty work for them, and had at least hinted that they would back up their “brothers” if war came.
For the next 3 days, the Legion destroyed Indian villages and burned their crops and then withdrew. Thirty-three of Wayne's men had been killed and 100 wounded. Alexander McKee,of the British Indian Department, the Indian dead at 190 men. It’s impossible to know the exact number of Indian killed and wounded as it was their practice to take as many of them off the field. The Legion claimed to have found 30-40 dead.
Wayne’s Legion attacked and burned all the Miami villages along the upper Wabash. He built Ft. Wayne as a symbol of American dominance over what became Indiana. Wayne, then returned to Ft. Greenville and waited for further orders from George Washington and Congress. the Jay Treaty was signed in November. Britain agreed to abandon its forts in the Northwest.
In August of 1795, the alliance signed a treaty with the United States and, for all but the far northwestern corner, ceded Ohio to the Americans. The Shawnee surrendered their lands on the Great Miami. Some of them moved to the headwaters of the Auglaize. Others joined the Lenapi in east-central Indiana on the White River . In what would become a matter of great importance later, as Treaty of Greenville was being signed, there was a minor chief absent from the proceedings.

His name, “Panther in the Sky,"
which is what the Shawnee called a comet,
would become know to the Americans as
Tecumseh.
Back in 1774 the Hathawekela sept of the Shawnee moved to northern Alabama to live with the Upper Creek. Tecumseh’s mother had just lost her Kispokotha Shawnee husband at the battle of Point Pleasant. She made the decision to go with here people.. However, she, left Tecumtha, as Tecumseh was called by his mother‘s sept, and his older brother, Lalawatitheka, to be raised by their older married sister, Tecumpease and their older still Kispokotha brother, Cheeseekau.
Many large groups of Shawnee had left Ohio to settle in southeast Missouri in 1773 and 1779. The Spanish welcomed them as a means of providing a defensive barrier against the Americans on the east and Osage to the south. Representatives of New Spain had gone to Ohio in 1788 to see if they could entice other Shawnee and Lenape to emigrate. They had been somewhat successful . The Spanish governor of Louisiana, Baron de Carondelet, gave the Missouri Shawnee a 25 mile square land grant near Cape Girardeau in 1793. Unwilling to accept the Greenville treaty, others of the Ohio Shawnee joined them. In 1795, later, the Hathawekela that had been living with the Creek in Alabama, made the trek to New Spain.
Many of the Kispokotha, and virtually all of the Hathawekela, and Piqua were in Missouri by 1800. Only the remaining Kispokotha, Chillicothe and Mequachake were left in Ohio. By the end of 1795 the Shawnee in Missouri outnumbered their brothers in Ohio.
Hostilities in the Ohio had ended until the rise Tecumseh, and the Battle of Tippecanoe and the war of 1812.
We've reached the close of the 18th Century. Let's go to our
THIRD & FINAL PHASE
of our little drama.


"We must be united
We must smoke the same pipe
We must f fight each other's battles
And more than that, We must love the Great Spirit."
--Tecumseh --
-His appeal to other tribes to join his confederacy.-

ALL ABOUT THE SHAWNEE
SHAWNEE HISTORY 2
SHAWNEE HISTORY 3
PORTRAYING INDIANS
THE CAPTIVE CORPS
TURTLE ISLAND
WIKTIONARY
WIKIPEDIA
BOONESBORO VILLAGE
CAMP DANIEL BOONE
CDB VIDEO
DANIEL BOONE COUNCIL
Camp Daniel Boone is a Boy Scout Camp located in the Great Smoky Mountains ~ 45 minutes west of Asheville, NC.
If for any reason the email links throughout this site do not work you may reach me by email at
shemaqua@bigbearsden.org,
snail mail me @
Shemaqua 
127 - A King Henry Way
Williamsburg, VA
23188-1903
or call me at 757.253.6999
or send up a smoke signal, use a drum, or communicate telepathically.
(I wouldn't count on those last three.)
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