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The drum pictured was completely
built and artwork by Mary Caple Harrington-Andover,NY. (Tap the picture
for larger view)
THE
FORBIDDEN TRAIL
BY
ALFRED G. HILBERT
Taken
from The Crooked
Lake
Review
July 1991
If you study a modern contour or geodesic survey map and plot upon it the
known trail of the early inhabitants, you will notice immediately that the
highways of today essentially follow the routes of the ancient trails.
This is understandable when we consider that travel and transportation
were originally problems of human stamina. Open
country was easier to traverse than heavily wooded land, and level or gently
sloping ground easier than broken, hilly country.
River valleys were natural travel avenues.
If streams were deep enough, rafting or canoeing was easiest, but if not,
the bottom lands still afforded easier movement that hilly terrain.
Here, too, were found plentiful food and water, the necessities for life
and travel. The Indian was no
different from you or me. When
traveling, he ordinarily took the easiest or most comfortable way.
Again looking at the maps, one notices, that many of our principal
cities, villages, and hamlets are located where these same Indians originally
had their settlements, and for the same reasons.
We have even kept the same names. Their
settlements were usually at the junction of two streams or valleys- a spot that
provided a level area for growing corn and fruit, and plenty of water and
driftwood for fuel. Habitations were
often at a junction of trails.
The principal trails were well worn and well marked from generations of
travel. There were also other trails
which had special purposes; some were even kept secret.
These secondary trails were usually more difficult, but often were short
cuts, or even parallel routes. Some,
instead of following the lowlands, were military trails that followed the ridges
and high spots so that the presence of an enemy could be spotted from afar.
Sometimes the higher elevation trails were used when the river-bottom
routes were flooded.
Across
New York
State
is the famous Route 5.
In its 300 miles from
Hudson
on the
Niagara
, it closely follows
the original trail made by generations of moccasined feet.
“A path 12 to 18 inches wide, mostly through forest with trees bearing
markings know only to the Indians. “The
hard packed rut was called the “Iron Path” by the early Jesuit missionaries.
This was the Great Central Trail of the Iroquois and led through the
lands of the five great nations from the villages of the Mohawks, through the
lands of the
Oneidas
, to the Long House of
the Onandagas, the Capital of the Iroquois Confederacy.
From here, it passed through the domain of the Cayugas to the war
village
of
Kanedesaga
, at
Geneva
, on to Canadaigua, the
birthplace of the Senecas, and on to present-day
Caledonia
,
Batavia
, and westward.
It was this trail that was traveled by those who first opened
New York
to the white men.
The Great Central Trail was but the main artery of a vast network of
trails that spread across the face of western
New York
.
The Senecas, the warrior branch of the Iroquois and keepers of the
Western Gate, using these trails in
their days of conquest, knew them all. Ironically,
while these excellent highways of the past enabled the Iroquois Confederacy to
reach a power which has been compared to that of the
Roman Empire
, these same trails
enabled two white armies, one of the French from
Canada
and the other of
General Sullivan, to invade and devastate the land of the Senecas.
While the Great Central Trail was an east-west route, there were two
major north-south routes using the
Genesee
Valley
.
One trail led south along the river to Canadea, the Western Door, thence
to the
Allegheny River
and westward to
Ohio
by way of
Cuba
and
Olean
.
The other branched off eastward at the Caneseraga to Dansville, and
Painted Post and Tioga Point to the Susquehanna watershed and
Pennsylvania
.
Lesser known was the Canisteo Path, a secondary trail which started at
Painted Post and followed the Canisteo River valley its entire length and ended
at Caneadea on the Genesee where it joined the Allegheny Trail to the southwest
and the Niagara Trail to west. These
well-marked and well-known trails connected the major Indian villages at Painted
Post, Canisteo, Caneadea, Oil Spring and Ichusa or
Olean
and on to
Ohio
.
However, to the Indian in a hurry westward, there was a short cut, a much
faster route between Tioga Point and
Olean
.
It was a secret trail and was known as the Forbidden Trail, and then
later as the Andaste Trail. Its
exact route has been the subject of much controversy among historians, and the
material for several books.
In the 17th Century, the southern part of
New York
in our area, while
under Seneca control, was inhabited by dislocated tribes such as the Mohicans
and
Delawares
who, having been
driven from their former homes by the whites, were allowed to live here as they
moved westward towards
Ohio
.
This was the time when the white man began his push into the
Kentucky-Ohio area. The distance
from the colonial centers of
Philadelphia
and
Baltimore
to
Fort
Allegheny
(
Pittsburgh
), the gateway to the
Ohio
country was not great
“as the crow flies” but getting there by a direct route was another problem.
The mountain ridges of western
Pennsylvania
running generally
north and south present a formidable barrier to east-west travel.
The early colonials went
westward to this area through the
Virginia
passes, particularly
the
Cumberland
Pass
, but the east coast
Indians had their own trail northward. This
trail, because it passed through Iroquois-controlled territory and actually
skirted the southern edge of the Iroquois homeland, was to them a strategic
route, and for security purposes, was barred to both unfriendly or undesirable
tribes and to all white men. This
trail starting at Tioga Point of the
Susquehanna and ending on the
Allegheny River
became known as the Forbidden Trail.
The threatened penalty for unauthorized use of the trail was to be
“burned at the stake” or “roasted”.
In 1765 Sir William Johnson was appointed Indian Agent for all the
northern British colonies. This
appointment was not popular in
Pennsylvania
where the Penns wished
to do their own negotiating and trading with the Indians.
In 1759 when Teedyuscung, a
Delaware
chief,
announced that he had been invited to a great Indian Council in
Ohio
, Governor Hamilton of
Pennsylvania
promptly named him as
a special emissary of the province and appointed the Moravian missionary
Christian Frederick Post to accompany him as advisor.
The plan was to ask the western Indians not to join the French and to
invite them to come to
Philadelphia
for a treaty.
The embassy party was to include two Christian Delawares as interpreters
and John Hays, a Scotch-Irishman, as a traveling companion for Post.
Teedyuscung for reasons of his own, rather than travel the difficult
mountain trail straight across
Pennsylvania
, decided on the
northern route over the easier Seneca-controlled, but Delaware-settled, trail
that followed the present southern
New York
border.
Reaching Tioga Point, the party consisted of two white men and twelve
Indians.
Their first stop was at the “Snake Hole.”
This was a village on the level just west of the present hamlet of
Chemung. They were already on the
Forbidden Trail but being with the famous Delaware Chief, were, while coldly
received, well treated and allowed to go on.
They passed by French Margaret’s (
Newtown
), and next stayed at
Kobustown (
West Elmira
).
Here at the village of the Delaware Wolf Clan, they were again well
treated but warned about going on. Passing
through Big Flats on
June 2, 1760
, they stopped next at Atsingsing (present day
Corning
). Here they joined by
some Tioga Point Indians who reported that a few days before they saw strange
shadows of horses and men fighting on the moon.
Two horses, one from the east and one from the west fought. The one from
the east won the battle. Then small
men appeared from the east and drove all before them.
The Indians claimed this to be an omen that the white men from the East
would overwhelm the red men. The
Delawares
and Senecas at
Atsingsing called them fools and cowards, and ridiculed them saying they had
seen nothing on the moon. (A study
at the New York Planetarium showed that on
May 29, 1760
, there was a partial
eclipse of the moon visible just at sunset in a narrow band across upstate
New York
.
Such an eclipse would have been visible from the Chemung-Tioga area but
not in the deep valley at
Corning
.
The hill to the west would have blocked this view.)
At Painted Post beyond Atsingsing, there was no longer any doubt that the
travelers were in trouble. They were
to proceed no farther until permission was received from the Seneca Council.
They stayed there two weeks, getting some encouragement, much
discouragement, even threats of death, but no official approval or disapproval
of their request to continue. A
jealousy of command sprang up between Post and Teedyuscung which, with the
confused and somewhat antagonistic
reception by the local Indians, made their stay quite nerve wracking.
Determined to continue, they proceeded up the Tioga to Passagachkunk.
Here the historians begin to disagree.
The Pennsylvanians placed this village on the
Cowanesque
River
at the site of
Elkland. The New Yorkers placed it
on the
Canisteo
River
near the present day
Canisteo, probably at the mouth of Colonel Bill’s Creek.
Again, Teedyuscung, Post, and Hayes were met with a mingled reception of
welcome and threats. The
Delawares
would have allowed
them to proceed but stalled because no definite permission had arrived from the
Onondaga Council. After another
couple of weeks of semi-belligerent treatment, they received the Seneca answer.
Teedyuscung could go on to the
Ohio
country but the two
whites had to turn back.
The threat of roasting was now real.
Even the friendly
Delawares
cautioned of “bad
storms” with the possibility of “falling limbs crushing one’s head.”
They turned back to
Pennsylvania
over the same route
that they had come. Since they did
not travel the western section, for the time being the western section of the
path could not be identified.
In 1764 the Eastern Iroquois under Sir William Johnson, angered by the
defiance of their orders by the pro-French Delawares and Senecas, sent an
expeditionary force into the Chemung River area and devastated the entire valley
from Tioga to Canisteo. (Fifteen
years later Sullivan did the same to the Iroquois to central
New York
.)
Three years later in 1767 the Moravian missionary David Zeisberger came
to Dihoga (Tioga Point) and secured permission from the Cayugas to settle his
Delaware and Mahican Christian
converts at Sheshequin, near the mouth of the Chemung.. He then ventured on an
exploratory tour to the
Ohio
country by way of the
old Andaste or Forbidden Trail.
Accompanied by two Indian convert assistants, Joseph Anthony and John
Papenhank, and one pack horse, he headed westward to the
Allegheny River
, and became, thereby, the first white man to
completely follow the route attempted by Post and Hayes in 1760.
Zeisberger’s journal for October 3rd reported “about
noon
we arrived at
Assinesink (Corning) previously
burnt and laid waste by the Mohawks. Curiosities
in the shape of pyramids of stone are here to be seen.
From them this place derives its name.
The two largest are over 2 or 3 stories high.
In some cases a flat stone rests on the top as if to keep off the rain-
whether these pyramids are natural or made by human hands, I will leave to
others to decide. Here the Tiaogee (Chemung)
divides into two branches, one goes north into the land of the Senecas, the
other along which we pursued our way extends towards the west.
We Passed Knacto (Painted Post) and Woapassique (Addison), two old Indian
towns. The way was very wild and
difficult.” (The stone piles
mentioned by Zeisberger were just west of Gibson until the DL&W RR Was
built. Most of them were blasted
apart then to make room for the railroad tracks.)
On this trip Zeisberger had been stopped and reproached for traveling on
the Forbidden Trail, but because of his religious reputation he was allowed to
continue. On another later trip in
1768 he reported no inhabitants in the valley between Wilawanna and the home of
James Davis at present day
Addison
.
Both Zeisberger and Hayes kept diaries of their travels.
These diaries are still in existence and available to historians.
However, neither of the men were scholarly writers so their efforts need
considerable patience and study to be deciphered.
Zeisberger, particulary, wrote exactly as one would talk, but in a
mixture of English and Moravian German plus some Onondaga and
Delaware
terms.
Hayes’ diary was not much better.
Numerous researchers have studied these documents and have come up with
different interpretations and conclusions. Outstanding
was the 1871 book of Moravian Bishop De Schweinite.
The Life and Times of David Zeisberger.
Since this was the only published interpretation, De Schweinite’s
routing of the Forbidden Trail by way of the
Cowanesque
River
was accepted by most
people. Anthony Wallace of the
Pennsylvania Historical Commission in his book on Teedyuscunk - King of the
Delawares
, published in 1945,
printed a map that used De Schweinite’s research and showed Pasigachkunkas
being on the Cowanesque at the present site of Elkland.
Now two books by accepted scholars made the claim that The Forbidden
Trail followed the Cowanesque in
Pennsylvania
.
Back in 1893 two leading historians of this area, General John S. Clark
of
Auburn
,
New York
, and Senator Charles
Tubbs of
Osccola
,
Pennsylvania
, disagreed publicly on the subject but after
much comparing of notes and sources, Senator Tubbs reluctantly admitted that the
route up the Canisteo probably was correct.
This research conclusion was, however, not published widely enough to
effect the thinking of most of the
Pennsylvania
historians.
In the 1930’s the Pennsylvania State Highway Department installed
historical road markers on Route 49 in the vicinity of Elkland identifying the
route as part of the Forbidden Trail.
One researcher, a Pennsylvanian, firmly believed that the westward trail
actually started below
Elmira
at the mouth of Seeley
Creek and continued up the creek through
Pine
City
over Jackson Summit to
Lawrenceville. Then, he believed, it
went up the Cowanesque to the headwaters from the vicinity of
Genesee
,
Pennsylvania
.
From a topographical standpoint this route would be entirely feasible and
would have the feature of bypassing every major Iroquois controlled village
between the Susquehanna and the
Allegheny
Rivers
except the “Snake
Hole” near Chemung and
Olean
on the Allegheny.
But this routing was discounted because Atsinasink (Corning) was not on
this route.
The placing of the road markers in
Pennsylvania
irritated the
New York
historians who, using
the same research material (Hays’ journal), plus the physical description of
the country, were convinced that Post’s
journey took him up the
Canisteo
Valley
instead of the
Cowanesque. Furthermore, the name
Passigachkunk in
Delaware
means the same as
Canisteo in Seneca (
Board Place
of Place of Boards).
The New Yorkers based their arguments on two very descriptive statements
in the Hayes diary. First,
“Teedyuscung and Christian Frederick Post stood in the narrow steep-walled
valley at Passigachkink and looked
up the Forbidden Trail.” Then,
“We waited for an escort back - this is an ordinary country.
Nothing but mountains and rocks and pine timber.”
To those of you who know both the Elkland and Canisteo areas, the broad
valley of the Cowanesque certainly doesn’t fit Hayes’ description.
The New Yorkers therefore insisted on the Canisteo route through the
narrow
Cameron
Valley
.
Beyond Canisteo, also following the topographical features, it was
assumed by many that the path followed the present-day route of the
Erie
railroad.
Another theory favored the Hornell, Almond, Angelica,
Belfast
route (that of the Southern Tier Expressway).
In the meantime William A. Hunter of Pennsylvania Historical Commission
had found additional information which had definitely located the trail.
He published a pamphlet on
Pennsylvania
trails in 1952, but
few people in our area read it.. Mr. Hunter had restudied the diaries of
Zeisberger and Hays and with these and other rough notes found in recent years,
was able to identify positively the route so well that in a 1971 book by Dr.
Paul Wallace (researched by Mr. Hunter) the route of the Forbidden Trail can be
followed so closely that you feel you are retracing the footsteps of the
Indians. Much of the distance of the
trail can be paralleled by an automobile. (It
is interesting to note that a child reading one of the diaries aloud helped to
solve the mystery. Written in a
misspelled combination of English and Pennsylvania Dutch, it would be deciphered
only when pronounced exactly as written.)
The highway markers had been removed in the late 1940s, and the New
Yorkers were vindicated in the location of Passigchkunk.
It has been spotted in our present day Canisteo area.
From there westward the trail, as now accepted was no longer a water
route, but swung south along the swampy ridge through Hartsville to just east of
Andover
.
The path crossed the valley, went up to follow the ridge of Beech Hill,
then dropped into the
Genesee
River
Valley
in the vicinity of
Shongo. The trail recrossed into
Pennsylvania
, just west of
Genesee
, and went to
Kinney’s Corners, Eleven Mile Spring, and on westward across the
Pine Barrens
to Shinglehouse on
Oswayo Creek. Here travelers made or
secured canoes for travel to Ceres, Ichusa (
Olean
) and on down the
Allegheny River
.
It has long been suspected by historians that Zeisberger was not the
first white man to travel the trail. Sketchy
information suggests that Etienne Broule, the French explorer, used part of this
route in 1615 on his way to Carantouan (Spanish Hill) at Waverly to enlist the
Andastes to help fight the Iroquois. His
account, however, merely state he traveled from the Niagara country and came to
Tioga Point from the west skirting the southern and western edges of the Seneca
country. But research during the
1980’s indicates the Broule’s story of a trip in this area was fabrication.
The 1976 Bicentennial reawakened interest in our local history.
With the information that the Forbidden Trail passed near Andover, New
York, the village of Andover selected as a project the location and marking of
the trail. Local research had
identified the trail westward from Canisteo.
On
October 9, 1976
, in a public ceremony a marker was place on Route
417 at the
Shovel Hollow Road
(Allegany County Route
21), east of
Andover
, to show where this path had crossed that highway.
The local committee, notably Mrs. Rosemary Burger of
Andover
and Mr. Nicholas Ives
of
Shongo
,
New York
, with the help of the
Boy Scouts, marked the trail westward to maintain its identity for future
generations.
The Forbidden Trail is no longer an intriguing mystery nor the subject of
controversy between the historians of the Twin-Tier counties of our two great
states, but there still remains the romance of the name and the soothing fact
that it indeed was partially in both states.
Its exact location is another triumph for those who labor to complete the
jigsaw pictures of history from fragments of the past.
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