llborton'e History of Iftebraefta Butbentic 1400 to 1 906 Complete (Copyrighted 1990. All right reserved,) By courtesy of Editors and Publishers of Morton's Ilisiory, the l'ubllsliera Newspaper Union of Lincoln, Nebraska, li permitted Its reproduction in papers of thtlr 1 CHAPTER II CONTINUED. These cessions gavo tho United States title to tho east two-thirds of the state. Tho earliest treaty by which thoy acquired title to land In this state was made with, tho Kansas In 1825; by this treaty tho Kansas ceded a semicircular tract along tho south lino, reaching from Falls City to Rod Willow county and nearly as far north as Lincoln. So It seems that tho Kansas at least laid claim to part of our territory. Tho next detachment of tho great Slouan family to Invade Nebraska was from tho northorn branch of this trlbo which dwelt along tho Great Lakes. Tho ABslnlboIns had separated from this branch as early as 1050, and, ac cording to McGco, wero near (ho Lako of tho Woods In 17CG, so thoy had not long wandqred over our soil when written history began. Tho Pawnees and Omahas Joined In repelling the advanco of these north ern tribes and hold thorn well back from tho waterways for many years, but thoy hunted on tho head-waters of tho Platte nnd Republican and oven aB far bouUi as tho head-waters of tho Smoky Hill and Solomon rivers. Tho Crows woro doubtless tho first to en croach on tho Platte valley; thoy drifted to tho Ulack Hills in an early day and hunted on tho Platto from tho northwest. The Blackfoot, a branch of tho Saskatchewan tribe, camo later. The Yankton, Santoo, Brulo, Slssoton, Ogallala, Toton, Mlnnetareo, and partB of other tribes from tlmo to time jhuntod or fought on tho head-waters of tho Platto. They joined In coding the northwest part of tho Btate to tho United States in 18C8, reserving for themselves a common hunting right, which they relinquished In 1875. Thoy are now on the various reservations In Dakota and Indian Territory. Tho WInnobagoB woro tho last of the groat Slouan family to come; thoy were moved from Minnesota to a part of the Omaha reservation In 18G2, whoro thoy still reside. Schoolcraft says this trlho once lived on a branch of the Crow Wing river In Mlrfnesota. Some of the Santee Sioux wore moved to Nebraska at the same tlmo, but many of both tribes came across tho coilntry bofore. f To the Algonkian family belong the Ghoyenno, Arapaho, and Atslna, who wandered over the western part of .Nebraska, as .did the Sac and Fox tribe, which had a reservation In tho extreme southeast part of the state from 183G to 1885. The Algonkian family once occupied the greator part of the Mississippi valley, At a very early date the ChoyehneB drifted west ward through the Dakotas and gavo their name to one of the important streams. Later they drifted south ward. Lewis and Clark mentioned this tribe as occupying a position on' the Choyenne rivor in 1804, whllo Long in his expedition of 1819 found a small band which had seceded from tho main stock on the Cheyenne rlvor, and had roamed with the Arapaho along the Platto river. There is a record, by Fremont, of this tribe be ing on the Platte above Grand Island In 1843. They ceded tho southwestern portion of Nebraska in 1861. The Arapanos, line tuo uneyonnes, occupied Nebraska as a roaming trlbo. The impression left by the very lim ited number of writers who have spo ken of them seems to be that they came from the' north. Thoy wore pressed by the Sioux from the east and by the Shoshoneans from the west The date of their coming to Nebraska la obscure. The time of their separation from the eastern par ent stock is shrouded in antiquity, and as early travelers found them a wild race, and not easy to study, little f their early history Is rocorded. They joined the Cheyenne and Arkan sas Indians In ceding to the United States government the extreme south west portion of Nebfaska. So far as can be learned the Arkansas nevor occupied any part of Nebraska. The Atslnas woro closely allied to tho Blackfeet (Slouan) and, Bince whites have known them, have affiliated, with that tribe. They are distinctly Algon klan, however, and have a legend toll- the Arapahos. As Btated above, the Algonkian stock occupied most of tho Mississippi valley at one time. Tho United States purchased all of Missouri north of the river, most of Iowa, and a part of Illinois. Wisconsin, and Minnesota from tho Sacs and Foxes. Thoy seom to have been the original owners of the Mississippi and Missouri front, and' tho Slouan tribes as thoy drifted west ward doubtless had them to doal with. This may account for the movement westward of the Otoe and tho Kansas tribes across the river. Tho Sacs and Foxes relinquished their possessions and retired to a southern reservation, excepting a band who took a resorvo on the Great Nomaha river, partly In Nebraska and partly In Kansas, and which reraalnB In the Great Nemaha agenoy. ' X Powell does not believe that tho Shoshonean family, occupied apart of Nebraska, and it Is doubtful whether any part of this family had more than a transient home within the state. It is certain that the Comanches roamed over our territory, and doubtless the "Padoucas" onco had a more or less permanent home here; at least the north fork of tho Platte river was known In the early days aa the Pa douca fork. Mooney says: "In 1719 the Comanche were mentioned under their Slouan name of Padouca as liv big la what Is now western Kansas. It must bo remembered that fivo hun dred to oight hundred miles was an ordinary rango for a plalnB trlbo, and the Comanchos woro equally at homo on tho Platto or In Chihuahua (Mex ico)." Tho great Shoshonean family occupied tho mountain country from tho south lino of Oregon to tho north line of Arizona, and oxtendod from tho Pacific coast at the southwest cor nor of California nearly to tho west lino of what Is now Nebraska. They woro a powerful and numerous peo ple. Lntor tho Slouan bands drove tlio Comanches south nnd tho other branches of tho Shoshonean family west and north. Lewis and Clark in 1805 mention tho Padoucas as extinct oxcopt In name. Bourgmont visited tho Padoucas on tho head-waters of tho Kansas in 1724. Tho Comnnchos and tho Kansas woro closely asso ciated for one hundred and fifty years, nays Mooney. Thoro Is no record that tho Comanches over, ceded any part of this state to tho United Stntcs. About 1700 a tribe of tho Klowan family migrated from the far north west nnd took up a residence In the vicinity of tho Black Hills. From thoro thoy woro driven by tho Slouan trlbOB, and Lewis and Clark montlon them as residing on the north fork of tho Platto In 1805, and numbering sevonty tepees. They slowly drifted southward until thoy occupied tho country south of tho Arkansas river. As this trlbo nevor lived far from tho mountains, their occupancy of Ne braska was but transient. Powell shows this linguistic family as occu pying tho extreme southwest part of Nebraska, but thoro is no record that thoy over coded any part of tho state. Thoro was a "half-breed" tract sit uated between tho Nemaha and Mis souri rivers sot apart In 1830, Intended for tho homo of civilized Indians be longing to tho Omaha, Iowa, Otoe, Yankton, and Santee Sioux half breeds. Tho Pino RIdgo and Rosebud agencies aro located Just north of the north lino of Nebraska, In South Da kota, and the Indian title to a narrow strip adjoining in this state la not yet extinguished. There are titles In tho old Sac and Fox and Iowa reservation, in Richardson county, still vested In Indians, and a few live there. Tho Santoo agency, near Niobrara, still maintains an agent who reports to tho commissioner of Indian affairs for this trlbo and also for the Ponca sub agency, situated twenty miles west be tween the Niobrara and Missouri riv ers. The Indians at these agencies, together with the Omahas and Win- nobagos, In Thurston county, aro tho only Indian wards of tho government In Nebraska at the present time. Ac cording to the census of 1900 there wero 3,322 Indians in the state against 2,685 in 1890. Three Indian schools aro maintained by tho federal govern ment in thiB state, on tho Santee, Winnebago, and Omaha reservations respectively, while a boarding school for Indians Is situated at Genoa, in Nance county. All tribal lands, except a small part of the Omaha reservation, have been allotted In soveralty, and all Indians are taxed as citizens of the state. Tho Omahas now number t.welvo hundred and tho Wlnnobagos eleven hundred. The Omahas aro of a higher grado of development and civilization and are slowly increasing In numbers. In their married relations they observe the principle of monogamy with cred itable faithfulness, and they aro in clined to hold on to and to cultivate their lands. The Wlnnobagos, on the other hand, live much more loosely In this Tespect; comparatively few of them are lawfully married, and they have but little regard for tho mar riage bond. They aro much less per sistont' than 'tho Omahas In holding on to their lands, nnd less regular and industrious In their habits. All tho lands of tho reservation, except a few hundred acres of a very poor quality, have now been allotted. Un der tho Inw lands, which have been allotted can not be nllenated by tho original grantees nor by their Inher itors as long as there aro minor heirs. TIiub far this class of lands amounts to about ten per cent of tho total allotment, or about fifteen hundred acres. As late as 1846 there wero only a very fow whlto settlors, scat tered hero and there, In that part of southwestern Iowa bordering on tho Missouri river. By the treaty of Sep tember 26, 1833, fivo million acros of land In southwestern Iowa, extending north to the mouth of Boyor rlvor, south to tho mouth of the Nodaway rlvor. and east to tho west lino of the Sac and Fox lands, woro granted to tho Pottawattomlo trlbo of Indians, numbering about twenty-two hundred and fifty. Somo Ottawas and Chtppo ways living with the Pottawattomles wore participants In this grant. All of those Indians had been removed from the vicinity of Chicago. A sub agency and trading post waa estab lished at Traders Point (or at St. Francis), Iowa. By a treaty with tho United States, made "at the agency near Council Bluffs," June 6, 1846, tho Pottawattomles relinquished theso Iowa lauds. The agency at Bellevuo, on tho opposite side of tho Missouri river, had jurisdiction over the Oma has, Otoes, Poncas, and Pawnees. The Council Bluffs subagency on the Iowa side of the river was subject to the agency at Bellevuo. As has al ready been Indicated, Council Bluffs was vas shifting as tho great rlvor whose, shores its various sites adorned. It was first applied to the Lewis and Clark encampment, eighteen miles north of Omaha; then, ay reflection and by a sort of evolutionary south ward movement to Bellevuo; still later to tho subagency on tho Iowa border opposite Bellevuo. In 1853 January 19 Council Bluffs was substituted for Kanosvillo, which was tho original name (derived from a brother of Kane, the arctic explorer) of tho ham let on tho slto of tho present city of Council Bluffs. Thereafter tho placo was known by its present name by designation' of the postofflco depart ment; and It was formally incorpor ated by act of tho Iowa assembly, Feb ruary 24, 1853. According to tho Fron tier Guardian of September 18, 1850, a census taken at that time yielded a population, of 1,103 for Kanesvlllo and 125 for Trading Point or Council Bluffs; so that as lato as this date tho migratory name of Council Bluffs had not reached tho northern settle ment of Knnosvlllo, but by local usago was confined to Traders, or Trading Point. Tho domain of tho Omahas lay to tho north of the Platte river, and that of tho Otoes about its mouth both along the Missouri river. A strip of land Intervening was a source of chronic dispute between theso tribes. At tho tlmo of the Louisiana Pur- jchnso tho Otoes numbered about two nunureu warriors, including twenty five or thirty Mlssourls. A band of this trlbo had been living with the Otoes for about twenty-five years. In 1799 the Omahas numbered flfvo hun dred warriors; but as tho Mormons found them in 1846 this trlbo, and tho Otoes as well, had been reduced by tho scourge of small-pox to a mere remnant of their former numbers. Theso Indians aro described by their white neighbors of that time as being almost destitute of martial spirit and not viciously Inclined, but naturally ready to rob and steal when prompted by hunger, which, fortunately for their white neighbors, was their nearly chronic condition. Orson Hyde, editor of tho Frontier Guardian, in Us Issue of March 21, 1849, inspired by the wisdom of Solomon, advised tho uso of tho rod, and a real hickory at that, on the thieving Omahas and others. It Is said that tho Omahas were ex ceptionally miserable. "Unprotected from their old foes, the Sioux, yet for bidden to enter into a defensive al llanco .with them, thoy wore reduced to a pitiable handful of scarcoly more than a hundred families, the prey of disease, poverty-stricken, too coward ly to venture from the shadow of their tepeea to gather their acanty crops, unlucky in the hunt, slow to the chase, and too dispirited to be daring or suc cessful thieves." In the region between the Niobrara and Missouri rivers were tho Poncas, some fivo hundred o'r six hundred in number, and but little better than the Omahas and Otoes In condition and circumstances. According to Lewis and Clark, the Grand Pawnee and Republican Pawnee, numbering respectively five hundred and two hundred and fifty men, dwelt, In 1804, on tho south side of tho Platte oppo site tho mouth of the Loup; the Paw nee Loup or Wolf ' Pawnee, compris ing two hundred and eighty men, on the Loup Fork of the Platte about ninety miles above tho principal Paw nee; and a fourth band of four hun dred men on tho Red river. Clayton's Emigrant's Guide, in 1848, finds the old Pawnee Mission station at Plum creek, latitude 41 24' 29", nine and a quarter miles east of the Loup Fork ford (latitude 41 22' 37"; longitude 98 11'); and the old Pawnee village, formerly occupied by tho Grand Paw nee and Tappa, half a mile west of tho Loup Fork. This village was burned by the Sioux in the fall of 1846. In tho spring of 1847 .the Paw nee were found on the Loup Fork, about thirty miles east of the old vil lage, according to the same authority. Spain was preeminently the seat or chivalry at the time of the discovery of America and during tho-followlng centuries, whllo tho country now com prising the United States waB being discovered and colonized in detail until it was laughed out of her by Cervantes and knocked out of her by tho practical and prosy peoples of the more northorn countries and of the Teutonic race. But tho spirit of chiv alry was prolific of adventurous dis coverers through whose valorous en terprise Spain had como to possess, at the time tho little strip along the Atlantic comprising the American col onies was ready for political separa tion from Great Britain, tho whoe ter ritory west of tho Mississippi rlvor now comprised In Mexico and the United Statos, except that portion within the limits of tho states of Washington nnd Oregon. That part of theso Spanish domains north of tho present boundary lino of Mexico comprised more than two-thirds of tho present area of the United States. At this time Spain also dominated Contral and South America. Though Spain was the first discoverer of America, and established the first per manent colony within tho torrltory of the United States, she no longer owns a foot of tho continent; and she be came so weak that she lost all her holdings by force. It was of the spirit of Spanish chivalry to seek success by the royal road. Her explorers and discoverers were either animated by the search for gold like De Soto and for the swift nor the final battle for Coronado or for more Illusive treas ure, such as Ponce de Leon's elixir of life. But the ultimate race was not the strong. The continent came to the men who knew how to wait. Whllo it is still an unsettled and perhaps not very Important question whether tho Spanish Coronado was tho first white man to set foot In Ne braska, there is no doubt that he. was the- first white discoverer of whom there is any account of the great plains tributary to the Missouri river, and that he came very near to tho southern border of the Btate. In 153? a Franciscan friar, Marcos de NIza, whom Don Antonio de Men doza, viceroy of Mexico, had sent to Investigate reports of . populous set tlements In the region now comprised in Arizona and New Mexico, brought stories of vast wealth In the Seven Cities of Cibola. An army of about three hundred Spanish soldiers and one thousand Indians and servants was raised and equipped for the con quest of tho new country, and Fran cisco Vasquez do Coronado, governor of New Gallcla, a western border province of Mexico, was placed In command of tho expedition. Coronado appears to have been a bold and ven turesome cavalier a fit lieutenant of tho ambitious viceroy. The expedi tion Btarted from Compoatela the capital of Coronado'a province, about three hundred and seventy-five miles northwest from tho city of Mexico February 23, 1540. On tho 7th of July Coronado, with an advanced detach ment of tho main army, captured one of tho seven small Zunl villages, which, situated near the present west ern border of New Mexico, In about tho latitude of 35, and within a ra dius iof five leagues, constituted tho Seven Cities of Cibola. These vil lages were composed of small store houses, three or four stories high, but tho disappointed Spaniards found In them poverty Instead of the fabled riches. On an expedition from this point Coronado was partly compen sated for his disappointment, though doubtless in a way which ho did not fully appreciate, by discovering the grand canyon of tho Colorado. Now it was found that the richeB lay far beyond In the land of Quivera; and, probably through a stratagem to get rid of their oppressive and cruel visitors, the. atory of tho New Eldo rado was told by a native of Quivera who was met with as a captive of tho natives of Clcuye, a fortified vil lage east of Cibola on the Pecos river. The "Turk," aa the Spanlarda called the slave, on account of his appear- fjice, told more stories of large towns with hoards of gold .and silver and vast herds of buffalo In his country to the east. The greedy credulity of the Spaniards again listened to these fabulous tales, and in April or May, 1541, the army took up Its eastward march with the Turk for its guide. The slave intentionally led them by a wandering course far to the south, and, provisions becoming s'carco in the neighborhood of the head-waters of the Colorado river of Texas, Coro nado sent back all of the army ex cepting from twenty-six to thlrty-slx soldiers, with whom he pushed north ward on his journey of forty-two days to Quivera, now under the guidance of a good Indian, Ysopete, also a na tive of tho plains, the perfidious Turk having been taken Into custody. Tho party crossed tho Arkansas in tho neighborhood of Its southern bend, not far from tho present site of Dodge City. Thus the first white man's crossing of the Arkansas was at a placp which two hundred and sixty years later was to become an angle In the division between the Louisiana Purchase ceded to the United States and the residue of territory still held by Spain. At this point the boundary lino changed from Its northward course to the west along the Arkansas river. About eighty miles, to the northwest, at tho site of the present town of Great Bond, Coronado found the first Quivera village. Ho first met Indians of that name beyond the cross ing not far from Kinsley and Lamed. Here Imminence of his exposuro seems to have moved the Turk to confession that his people woro stran gers to the precious metals as well as to other riches, and he was straightway strangled by the enraged Spaniards. There was now nothing loft for them to fall back upon but appreciation of the richness of tho soil; for Jaramlllo, one of their chron Iclors, says: "Some satisfaction was experienced on seeing tho good ap pearance of the earth;" and Coronado himself writes that the soil of Quivera was "fat and black," and "tho best I have ever soon for producing all tho products of Spain." Tho buffalo Is described by these travelers ,ln a very nalvo and realistic manner. Like tho reindeer to tho Laplander, this beast was food and raiment for tho Indian natives, and it is curious to noto that buffalo "chips" wero used for fuel then, as thoy wore until recent days by our own pioneers. "One evening more came up a terrible storm of wind and hall, which left in tho camp hallstonoa as large as porrlngors, and even larger. They fell thick as rain drops, a8d in somo spots the ground was covered with them to tho depth of eight or ton inches. The storm caused many tears, weakness, and vows." Making a moderate allow ance for the quickened imagination of the belated Spaniards, these stories of what they saw Indicate that thoy Journeyed not far from Nebraska, Tho substantial agreement of the conclu sions drawn by Mr. Hodge of the eth nological bureau, of the accounts of their Journey by the Spanish travel era themselves, with the actual field work of Mr. J. V. Brower, leaves lit tle room for doubt that these adven turers reached the neighborhood of Junction City, or perhaps Manhattan, Kansas. Mr. Hodge, writing as lata as 1899, observes that tho -common error in determining latitude in the sixteenth century was about two de groes; therefore when Coronado said that Quivera, "where I have reached it, is in the 40th degree," that means that It was in fact in the 88th degree; and Mr. Hodge adds: "Nothing Is found in the narratives to Show posi tively that either Coronado or any member of his force went beyond the present boundaries of Kansas during their stay of twenty-five days in the provlnco of Quivera." Mr. E. B. Blackman, of the Nebraska State His torical Society, thinks that the state ments accredited to the Indians by Jaramlllo, that there was nothing be yond the point reached by the Span lards but Harahey tho Pawnee coun try "coupled with his own demonstra tions that tho Quivera village ex tended Into Nebraska, show that the Suaniards crossed our border; iwjd Simpson's studies led him to the con clusion tha""lt Is "exceedingly prob able that he (Coronado) reached the 10th degreo of latitude (now the boun dary between the states of Kansas and Nebraska) well on towards the Missouri river." Bandolier. George Winshlp Parker, Hodgo and Brower all substantially agree with H. H. Bancroft's earlier statement (1899) that, "there Is nothing In the Span iards' descriptions of tho region or of tho journey to shake Simpson's con clusion that Quivera was In modern Kansas." Tho writings of the Spaniards re ferred to are, In tho main, Coronado's letters and formal accounts of the Journey by Jaramlllo, a captain in the expedition, and of Castaneda who went back with the main body of the army, but industriously collected his material from hearsay. Tho latest and perhaps the most thorough man uscript work has been done by Parker in The Coronado Expedition, and Hodge in Coronado's March, and the results of their researches substan tially accord with the field work of Brower and Blackman, which is still under prosecution, and may yet show that Coronado was the discoverer of Nebraska proper. While this expedition appears to have been barren as to practical re sults, yet it has been said of it that for extent In distance traveled, aura- tlon In time, extendlng.from the spring of 1540 to the summer of a54Z, ana tho multiplicity of its cooperating branch explorations, it equaled, if It did not exceed, any land expedition that has been undertaken In modern times." Another writer observes that a bare subsistence and threatened - starvation wero tho only rewards in store for the volunteers upon this most famous of all the Spanish ex plorations, excepting those of Cortes. They discovered a land rich In min eral resources, but others were to reap. the benefits of the wealth of the mountain. -They discovered a land rich In material for the archeologlst, but nothing 'to satisfy their thirst for elorv or wealth." But this erudite author, like his Spaniards, has missed the main point. For they discovered the future granary of the world; and the fact that thoy were oblivious or dlsdainfu 1 of their main discovery nolnted the moral of future Spanish history. The Spaniards took, nothing and thoy gavo little two friars left as missionaries at Cibola and who soon woro tho crown of martyrdom. To Spain, from the first, nothing in her now-world conquests was gold that did not glitter; and for this she disdained to dig It was easier and moro chivalrous to rob. She of course made pretense of having substituted for this mero material good the price less but easy gift, religion. A shrewd er If not a juster race came after who were able to discern the true and In exhaustible body of gold hidden In tho dull-hued soil; and they tilled and natlently waited nature's reward. And lo, to them la tho kingdom. And Spain has her duo reward. Driven from all her vast outlying domains by the relentless forco of tho modern Industrial spirit, which she could nei ther assimilate nor entertain, Into a little cornor of Europe, there she lies, oblivious to progross, surviving chiefly as an echo, and consequential merely as a reminiscence of the dead past. Tho earliest authenticated explora tion bx whlto men on Nebraska aoll. was that of two brothers, Pierre and Paul Mallet, and six other Frenchmen In Juno, 1739. The Mallet brothers had probably como up from Now Or leans the year before and had win tered near the mouth of tho Niobrara river. An account of tiiotr journey from that neighborhood to Santa Fe forms a part of the Margry papers, which consist of reports of early French explorers of the trans-Missis-slppl country to the French author ities at New Orleans, and which have been printed by Margry lu Paris! In 1804, following the purchase of Louisiana, tho Lewis-Clark expedition was sent out by President Jefferaon for the purpose of gaining knowledge of the new and almost unknown ter ritory. N Following Ib a description of the company and outfit taken from the Journal of Lewis and Clark: