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An Odd Pastime
#13
(06-27-2020, 02:38 AM)wessonoil Wrote:
(06-27-2020, 01:51 AM)Ahabstar Wrote:
(06-27-2020, 01:09 AM)wessonoil Wrote:
(06-22-2020, 08:20 PM)Ahabstar Wrote:
(06-22-2020, 05:55 PM)Ninurta Wrote:
(06-22-2020, 04:41 AM)Ahabstar Wrote: I like to read odd old newspaper articles. Must be the historian in me. But I found one not terribly far from where I live that happened just a 140 years ago. I wonder where the item is now...

Transcribed from the Inter Ocean, 1880-01-09 

A PRAYER-BOOK IN A TREE’S HEART 
A correspondent writing form Eaton, Ohio, says: “Recently Nelson Davis, of West Alexandria, this county, cut down an oak tree about six feet in circumference, in the center of which was a cavity about seven inches square, partly filled with some rotten kind of wood and a roll of cloth, which crumbled, when touched. Inside of all was a German Catholic prayer-book, bound in leather and much worn. The book was printed in 1729, and had a Latin introduction, while some of the blank leaves are filled with writing in French, part of which is unintelligible, but enough is easily read to show that the owner was a French soldier, tells what battalion, and mentions the name of one of the officers as De La Magne. It may be of interest to the members of the Historical Society. A growth of at least five inches over the hole where it had been slipped into the tree hermetically sealed and preserved the book. It is now in the hands of W. C. Barnhart, at his book store in this place, and is regarded by all as a great curiosity.” 
Contributed by Nancy Hannah.

I dunno where West Alexandria is in OH, but there was a religious community founded by Germans and populated by Indians (mostly Lenape as I recall) at Gnadenhutten. They were massacred some time during the settlement of Ohio, and I wonder if this German prayer book might be linked to that? The French were active in the area as traders, which might explain how it got into the general vicinity, and the Gnadenhutten Massacre might have a bearing on how it got hidden in the middle of a tree.

Daniel Boone was long-hunting across the river in Kentucky with a brother in law when they came under attack by Shawnees and got separated. his brother in law was never seen again alive, but 20 years later his skeleton was found in a hollow tree by a settler. he had gotten wounded, and taken refuge in the hollow tree to hide, and never came out of it.

My 7 greats back grandfather was Adam O'Brien, who lived a couple years in a hollow sycamore in central WV before he got the gumption to build a cabin. Hollow trees are just where stuff and folks went to hide from attack back in the day.

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I never knew of that settlement. Even stranger is that Hugs (Coach Huggins) is from there. 

Preble County is on the western side of Ohio. Second county north from Cincinnati. Crazy thing about the Shawnee and all the mounds throughout their lands is that they were not mound builders nor descended from the Moundbuilders. They just took over the land when that tribe died out. So while one of the “capitols” of the Shawnee was Chillicothe, they only inherited Serpent Mound.

Have you read about the Glacial Kame Civilization? I think that is where the mound builders methods originated from. Burying their dead in artificial kames they built a.k.a. mounds.
Not likely as the Adena and later Hopewell were in this area at that time. The later mound builders was the Fort Ancient Culture which built Fort Ancient and Serpent Mound (maybe?). The Mississippian Mound Builders predate them all but supposedly none of these were descended from one another despite all of them liking to build mounds.
From what I read the Kame people were there from 8000-1000 BCE (Archaic Period), the Adena were there from 800 BCE- 1CE (Early Woodland Period), and the Hopewell were there from 100 BCE -500 CE (Middle Woodland Period). That puts the Kame culture, at most, several thousand years before either of them and maybe a small overlap at the end if you assume that these dates are absolutely correct. The Fort Ancient People were even later than all three of these other cultures.  

If you have sources that state different I'd be very interested in reading them.

I read very little on the Kame because they were further north. More towards present day Findlay and Lima from my understanding. But 10,000 years is the end of the Ice Age in Ohio. The amazing part is the Shawnee took all the land of the Fort Ancient people but never fought them as they were gone. And the Shawnee were an offshoot of the Algonquian that broke away from wars with the Iroquois. But they still skirmished with the Cherokee in Kentucky and held alliance with the Miami in Ohio. Of course both Shawnee and Miami moved around quite a bit as for their main areas.


Messages In This Thread
An Odd Pastime - by Ahabstar - 06-22-2020, 04:41 AM
RE: An Odd Passtime - by guohua - 06-22-2020, 05:44 AM
RE: An Odd Passtime - by Ahabstar - 06-22-2020, 01:26 PM
RE: An Odd Passtime - by Wallfire - 06-22-2020, 01:50 PM
RE: An Odd Pastime - by Ninurta - 06-22-2020, 05:55 PM
RE: An Odd Pastime - by Ahabstar - 06-22-2020, 08:20 PM
RE: An Odd Pastime - by bts - 06-22-2020, 09:11 PM
RE: An Odd Pastime - by wessonoil - 06-27-2020, 01:09 AM
RE: An Odd Pastime - by Ahabstar - 06-27-2020, 01:51 AM
RE: An Odd Pastime - by wessonoil - 06-27-2020, 02:38 AM
RE: An Odd Pastime - by Ahabstar - 06-27-2020, 05:06 AM
RE: An Odd Pastime - by Ninurta - 06-28-2020, 11:37 PM
RE: An Odd Pastime - by Ninurta - 06-28-2020, 11:17 PM
RE: An Odd Pastime - by Ninurta - 06-28-2020, 11:02 PM
RE: An Odd Pastime - by SecretKnowledge - 06-23-2020, 06:45 PM
RE: An Odd Pastime - by wessonoil - 06-27-2020, 01:05 AM
RE: An Odd Pastime - by wessonoil - 06-29-2020, 04:31 PM
RE: An Odd Pastime - by Ahabstar - 06-29-2020, 06:07 PM
RE: An Odd Pastime - by Ninurta - 06-30-2020, 05:23 AM
RE: An Odd Pastime - by Ninurta - 06-30-2020, 05:20 AM
RE: An Odd Pastime - by wessonoil - 06-30-2020, 12:40 PM
RE: An Odd Pastime - by Night Star - 06-30-2020, 08:23 AM

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