Life with Indians: Chapter 1
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Show Notes: Life with Indians – Chapter I
This episode covers the early formative years and the initial westward journey of the author, beginning in the autumn of 1809. We follow his transition from a young man in Albany County to a traveler embarking on a grand exploration of the American West.
Key highlights of this episode include:
- Manufacturing Roots: The author details his family's history in the glass-making industry, specifically the work of his father, Col. Lawrence Schoolcraft. He describes his own role in directing the erection of manufacturing works across New York, Vermont, and New Hampshire.
- Early Indian Observations: During a stay in Vernon, New York, the author has his first meaningful encounters with the Oneida and Stockbridge (Mohigan) tribes, observing their customs long before he knew his life would be dedicated to studying them.
- The Great Migration (1818): Following the War of 1812, the author joins a massive wave of easterners migrating west. He describes the economic pressures—including a "fiscal crisis" and agricultural panic—that drove people toward the "land of promise" in the Mississippi Valley.
- River Travel by Ark: Experience the "novelty and freshness" of 19th-century river travel as the author descends the Alleghany and Ohio Rivers in a large, flat-bottomed "ark".
- A Growing Flotilla: The journey from Pittsburgh to Cincinnati involves meeting notable figures, including Dr. Selman and U.S. Senator J.B. Thomas. The author recounts a harrowing moment where he helped save Senator Thomas's boat and machinery from sinking.
- Early Cincinnati: The episode concludes with the author's arrival in Cincinnati, where he shares anecdotes of city life and local "tricks" played on arriving emigrants alongside John C.S. Harrison, the son of General William Henry Harrison.
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