BRANTFORD ~ EXPOSITOR The Six Nations =s:= SOUVENIR ~' NUMBER r ') ~~;re,.v HERE are few 1 .1isto ri cal even.ts r.ecorded in" ~:ne ri ca ~hat ~r~ more interesting ~~'l~r . ~~ th an that touchmg the consolldatl~)t1 of t~e l~ Ive NatIOns 111tO o.ne vast confederation, under the state~mansht p of HIawatha, nearly four centu n es ago. ' ., ~v. In following up the history of thI S peop le we find them..! su?sequent. to th.el l alliance, engage d .in a~ the early co lo ni al wars. French and EnglIsh colonists altke feared, yet pandered to, thIS g~cat wa r-like nation, who at one tune ru led the land fr om the Atlantic sea-board to the Mississippi , and fr om North Carolina to the great lakes and river St. Lawrence. That the remnant of thisall-power- : - ' - , 1 full people who once dictated terms to ever y white and red race on the continent, is, in the present day, a I law abiding, :':.\"/ peaceful, semi -agricultural nation, occupying a g reat portion of our OWI1 county, and the ~ ladjoining one of Haldimand, is t ellin g evidence of the Nineteenth century march of advancement, and the possibilities of all intelligent races th at are given oppo rtuniti es of absorbing what is best in their sister-nations, whether it be art, habit, or handicraft. The English and the Iroquois, as we know them in the county of Brant, have mad a brot he rl y exc han ge of many things, within the last few decades, \\ Itich ItcljJpi;y l)UUC::' iilUt C goo I to both nations than t hos rstwhile intermll sk t sh t , Th " nadian s hav ad ltd th 11' es,. where}hey hold ~~ei,; various relig ious dances and b festivals througho~t th e y~ar, worshipping in the exquisite beauty o.f " Pagat: " faith, and Simple belt ef 111 the Great SP ll'lt, that. won~rou.s, peaceful, large-h earted God of the unchristianized indian, that G?d that t}1ey believe no SIl1 can really estran~e them fr om, whose lov.e and favor IS the.lrs, It matters not how un worthy they may be, that God that is pleased WIth th e SImple dances a nd feast~ ~f hiS red children, w ho harbors no Ill-thoug ht or feel111 g towards them and who has for souls and bodies after death whether they be bad or good , ltmltless reaches of Happy Hunting g rounds, and throug h all eternity the' happy atmosphere known only where an everla;ting " Peace-Pipe" is in daily use between God and man . . But in early times the dances of the domesticated Iroquois were not always the outcome of relig ious zeal and good-fellowship with the Grec~.t Spirit; for Amenca l<1le~v no , grea~er terror than when a band. of e ig ht or ten ~housand I.roquois warriors chose to don their wC!:r pai(~t, and set forth c~~1quenng and t~ conquer; theIr fielce v l sa~es, a~1d half-naked bodies, decorated With the ommous streaks of black and red, meantl1g Blood and D~ath, . ah~ays the \~a l colors o f the Mohawks. I' o r mdes across the country could their terrible war cries be heard and the hated Huron crouched fearfull y 111 hIS wI g wam beSide the GeOt'gi~n bay, and the faithful Jesuit fathe,r crossed himself to no purpose, when the Iroquois ro used with a just ire, impassioned by a taunt, marche~ north ward, and m one fell battle extermlllated JesuIt and Huron leav inrr the little christian hamlet a desolation and dancinrr a triumphant war dance on the htlls that overlook Penetan~llishene. No, it is not a fiction. The an~estors ~f those calm-eyed Indian men, of thos~ low-voiced, gentle-faced wornen,who on m~rket days. throng our busy little stre ets, were some of the bravest, most intrepid and valiant warriors known to the h isto ry of th e worid ; men who defended their co untry ~tnd th.e .( ashes of their fathers," agail;st the inroads of a g reat all-conquering race; men who fou ght, and bled, and died ~o hold the weste rn continent against at.l tr~ co mm g ~astern power, as England.s sons woul~ battle and fall to-day, were their OWll mother country threate ned With a power that w?uld eventuallyannlhdate., subject- then ~Ias. ! abs?rb their blood, theIr traditions, their nation , until naug ht promises to remain save a memory. The Iroqu(:)\!:; got. a bad name ,for ~eroclty and blood thlrstmess m the early days of American history, but I can tell you, reader, that those Indian warriors were savage. WIth a ng h~eous patr~ot­ Ism , an~ ~l:at they won the resp~ct of the whole world by the way they co ntended and wrestled to retain their forest homes, theIr game, th~lr gods. ~ he whole clvlltzed world wo uld ha,ve h~ssed them had t~ey not loved the land and fou ght fiercely for the soil where ,their C!:ncestors wer~ born, and Itved ~l11d died, and p~rhaps the ances~()r of thiS qU1et-:nan~lered IndIan , who any day you mi g ht see in our streets, was o nce an md 0!1~ ltable war-stamed brave, standmg ankle ~eep 111 the blood of ), r~llch and Engltsh mvaders, fighting with the desperate savagery, born only of the pre-mOt1ltlOn of a l o~t cause, a lost l3;nd ,. a los.t contment, never to be regallled ; of a scattered people never aa ain to be a nation and then with the noblest of that military valor, 111 after years lmkmg hIS fate with his own cOIl4uero rs .. And th.en p<:rhaps ~he strangest b of all things has bappened: that to this v ery Iroquois who fought ~nd killed yo r own an.cestors, then afterwards fo ug ht Sl?~ by Side WIth their sons against the colonists, perhaps to this very man who fought so fiercely for hiS 0 \''''21 country, then WIth such ardor and valor fo r the Bntlsh flag, you owe the possession of your peaceful home in Canada to-day. E. PA L[ E J II ST