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Show MOONEY] PARDO' 8 EXPEDITIONS- 1566- 67 27 Accordingly two soldiers were sent on foot with Indian guides to find Chisca and learn the truth of the stories. They rejoined the army some time after the march had been resumed, and reported. according to the Elvas chronicler, that their guides had taken them through a country so poor in corn, so rough, and over so high mountains that it would be impossible for the army to follow, wherefore, as the way grew long and lingering, they had turned back after reaching a little poor town where they saw nothing that was of any profit. They brought back with them a dressed buffalo skin which the Indians there had given them, the first ever obtained by white men, and described in the quaint old chronicle as " anox hide as thin as a calf's skin, and the hair like a soft wool between the coarse and fine wool of sheep." 1 Garcilaso's glowing narrative gives a somewhat different impression. According to this author the scouts returned full of enthusiasm for the fertility of the country, and reported that the mines were of a tine species of copper, and had indications also of gold and silver, while their progress from one town to another had been a continual series of feastings and Indian hospitalities. 2 However that may have been, De Soto made no further effort to reach the Cherokee mines, but continued his course westward through the Creek country, having spent altogether a month in the mountain region. There is no record of any second attempt to penetrate the Cherokee country for twenty- six years ( 9). In 1561 the Spaniards took formal possession of the bay of Santa Elena, now Saint Helena, near Port Royal, on the coast of South Carolina. The next year the French made an unsuccessful attempt at settlement at the same place, and in 15tW5 Menendez made the Spanish occupancy sure by establishing there a fort which he called San Felipe. 8 In November of that year Captain Juan Pardo was sent with a party from the fort to explore the interior. Accompanied by the chief of " Juada" ( which from Vandera's narrative we find should be fcWJoara," i. e., the Sara Indians already mentioned in the De Soto chronicle), he proceeded as far as the territory of that tribe, where he built a fort, but on account of the snow in the mountains did not think it advisable to go farther, and returned, leaving a sergeant with thirty soldiers to garrison the post. Soon after his return he received a letter from the sergeant stating that the chief of Chisca- the rich mining country of which De Soto had heard- was very hostile to the Spaniards, and that in a recent battle the latter had killed a thousand of his Indians and burned fifty houses with almost no damage to themselves. Either the sergeant or his chronicler must have been an unconscionable liar, as it was asserted that all this was done with only fifteen men. Immediately afterward, according to the same story, the sergeant marched with twenty men about a day's * Elvas, Hakluyt Society, IX. p. 66,1861. sGarcilaso, La Florida del Inea, p. 141, ed. 1723. • Shea, J. G., in Winaor, Justin, Narrative and Critical History of America, n, pp. 260,278; Boston, 1886. |