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Show 150 THE MIDE'WIWIN OF THE OJIBWA. where they continue to adhere to traditional customs and beliefs, thus presenting an interesting field for ethnologic research. The present distribution of the Ojibwa in Minnesota and Wisconsin is indicated upon the accompanying map, PL n. In the southern portion many of these people have adopted civilized pursuits, but throughout the northern and northwestern part many bands continue to adhere to their primitive methods and are commonly designated " wild Indians." The habitations of many of the latter are rude and primitive. The bands on the northeast shore of Red Lake, as well as a few others farther east, have occupied these isolated sites for an uninterrupted period of about three centuries, as is affirmed by the chief men of the several villages and corroborated by other traditional evidence. Father Claude Alloiiez, upon his arrival in 1666 at Shagawaumi-kong, or La Pointe; found the Ojibwa preparing to attack the Sioux. The settlement at this point was an extensive one, and in traditions pertaining to the " Grai* d Medicine Society " frequent allusion is made to the fact that at this place the rites were practiced in their greatest purity. Mr. Warren, in his History of the Ojibwa Indians, 1 bases his belief upon traditional evidence that the Ojibwa first had knowledge of the whites in 1612. Early in the seventeenth century the French missionaries met with various tribes of the Algonkian linguistic stock, as well as with bands or subtribes of the Ojibwa Indians. One of the latter, inhabiting the vicinity of Sault Ste. Marie, is frequently mentioned in the Jesuit Relations as the Saulteurs. This term was applied to all those people who lived at the Falls, but from other statements it is clear that the Ojibwa formed the most important body in that vicinity. La Hontan speaks of the " Outchepoues, alias Sauteurs," as good warriors. The name Saulteur survives at this day and is applied to a division of the tribe. According to statements made by numerous Ojibwa chiefs of importance the tribe began its westward dispersion from La Pointe and Fond du Lac at least two hundred and~ fifty years ago, some of the bands penetrating the swampy country of northern Minnesota, while others went westward and southwestward. According to a statement* of the location of the tribes of Lake Superior, made at Mackinaw in 1736, the Sioux then occupied the southern and northern extremities of that lake. It is possible, however, that the northern bands of the Ojibwa may have penetrated the region adjacent to the Pigeon River and passed west to near their present location, thus avoiding their enemies who occupied the lake shore south of them. » ColL Minn. Hist. Soc., 1885, vol. 5, p. 180. ' Reproduced from the ninth volume of the New York Colonial Documents, pp. 1054,1055. \ |