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DIVISION OF THE NORTHWEST TERRITORY
The increased emigration to
the Northwest, the extent of the domain, and the inconvenient
modes of travel, made it very difficult to conduct the ordinary
operations of government, and rendered the efficient action
of courts almost impossible. To remedy this, it was deemed
advisable to divide the territory for civil purposes. Congress,
in 1800, appointed a committee to examine the question and
report some means for its solution. This committee, on the
3d of March, reported that:
"In the three western countries
there has been but one court having cognizance of crimes,
in five years, and the immunity which offenders experience
attracts, as to an asylum, the most vile and abandoned criminals,
and at the same time deters useful citizens from making
settlements in such society. The extreme necessity of judiciary
attention and assistance is experienced in civil as well
as in criminal cases * * * * * To minister a remedy to these
and other evils, it occurs to this committee that it is
expedient that a division of said territory into two distinct
and separate governments should be made; and that such division
be made by a line beginning at the mouth of the Great Miami
River, running directly north until it intersects the boundary
between the United States and Canada."
The report was accepted by Congress,
and, in accordance with its suggestions, that body passed
an Act extinguishing the Northwest Territory, which Act
was approved May 7. Among its provisions were these:
"That from and after July
4 next, all that part of the Territory of the United States
at a point on the Ohio River, which lies to the westward
of a line beginning at a point on the Ohio, opposite to
the mouth of the Kentucky River, and running thence to Fort
Recovery, and thence north until it shall intersect the
territorial line between the United States and Canada, shall,
for the purpose of temporary government, constitute a separate
territory, and be called Indiana Territory."
After providing for the exercise
of the civil and criminal powers of the territories, and
other provisions, the Act further provides:
"That until it shall otherwise
be ordered by the Legislatures of the said Territories,
respectively, Chillicothe on the Scioto River shall be the
seat of government of the Territory of the United States
northwest of the Ohio River; and that St. Vincennes on the
Wabash River shall be the seat of government for the Indiana
Territory."
Gen. Wm. Henry Harrison was
appointed Governor of the Indiana Territory, and entered
upon his duties about a year later. Connecticut also about
this time released her claims to the reserve, and in March
a law

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was passed accepting this cession. Settlements
had been made upon thirty-five of the townships in the reserve,
mills had been built, and seven hundred miles of road cut
in various directions. On the 3d of November the General
Assembly met at Chilicothe. Near the close of the year,
the first missionary of the Connecticut Reserve came, who
found no township containing more than eleven families.
It was upon the first of October that the secret treaty
had been made between Napoleon and the King of Spain, whereby
the latter agreed to cede to France the province of Louisiana.
In January, 1802, the Assembly
of the Northwestern Territory chartered the college at Athens.
From the earliest dawn of the western colonies, education
was provided for, and as early as 1787, newspapers were
issued from Pittsburgh and Kentucky, and largely read throughout
the frontier settlements. Before the close of this year,
the Congress of the United States granted to the citizens
of the Northwestern territory the formation of a State government.
ONe of the provisions of the "compact of 1787"
provided that whenever the number of inhabitants within
prescribed limits exceeded 45,000, they should be entitled
to a separate government. The prescribed limits of Ohio
contained, from a census taken to ascertain the legality
of the act, more than that number, and on the 30th of April,
1802, Congress passed the act defining its limits, and on
the 29th of November the Constitution of the new State of
Ohio, so named from the beautiful river forming its southern
boundary, came into existence. The exact limits of Lake
Michigan were not then known, but the territory now included
within the State of Michigan was wholly within the territory
of Indiana.
Gen. Harrison, while residing
at Vincennes, made several treaties with the Indians, thereby
gaining large tracts of lands. The next year is memorable
in the history of the West for the purchase of Louisiana
from France by the United States for $15,000,000. Thus by
a peaceful mode, the domain of the United States was extended
over a large tract of country west of the Mississippi, and
was for a time under the jurisdiction of the Northwest government,
and, as has been mentioned in the early part of this narrative,
was called the "New Northwest." The limits of
this history will not allow a description of the territory.
The same year large grants of land were obtained from the
Indians, and the House of Representatives of the new State
of Ohio signed a bill respecting the College Township in
the district of Cincinnati.
Before the close of the year,
Gen. Harrison obtained additional grants of lands from the
various Indian nations in Indiana and the present limits
of Illinois, and on the 18th of August, 1804, completed
a treaty at St. Louis, whereby over 51,000,000 acres of
lands were obtained from the

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aborigines. Measures were also taken to learn
the condition of affairs in and about Detroit.
C. Jouett, the Indian agent
in MIchigan, still a part of Indiana Territory, reported
as follows upon the condition of matters at that post:
"The Town of Detroit.—The
charter, which is for fifteen miles square, was granted
in the time of Louis XIV of France, and is now, from the
best information I have been able to get, at Quebec. Of
those two hundred and twenty-five acres, only four are occupied
by the town and Fort Lenault. The remainder is a common,
except twenty-four acres, which were added twenty years
ago to a farm belonging to Wm. Macomb. * * * A stockade
incloses the town, fort and citadel. The pickets, as well
as the public houses, are in a state of gradual decay. The
streets are narrow, straight and regular, and intersect
each other at right angles. The houses are, for the most
part, low and inelegant."
During this year, Congress granted
a township of land for the support of a college, and began
to offer inducements for settlers in these wilds, and the
country now comprising the State of Michigan began to fill
rapidly with settlers along its southern borders. This same
year, also, a law was passed organizing the Southwest Territory,
dividing it into two portions, the Territory of New Orleans,
which city was made the seat of government, and the District
of Louisiana, which was annexed to the domain of Gen. Harrison.
On the 11th of January, 1805,
the Territory of MIchigan was formed, Wm. Hull was appointed
governor, with headquarters at Detroit, the change to take
effect on June 30. On the 11th of that month, a fire occurred
at Detroit, which destroyed almost every building in the
place. When the officers of the new territory reached the
post, they found it in ruins, and the inhabitants scattered
throughout the country. Rebuilding, however, soon commenced,
and ere long the town contained more houses than before
the fire, and many of them much better built.
While this was being done, Indiana
had passed to the second grade of government, and through
her General Assembly had obtained large tracts of land from
the Indian tribes. To all this the celebrated Indian, Tecumthe
or Tecumseh, vigorously protested, and it was the main cause
of his attempts to unite the various Indian tribes in a
conflict with the settlers. To obtain a full account of
these attempts, the workings of the British, and the signal
failure, culminating in the death of Tecumseh at the battle
of the Thames, and the close of the war of 1812 in the Northwest,
we will step aside in our story, and relate the principal
events of his life, and his connection with this conflict.

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Tecumseh, the Shawanoe Chieftain.
(click on image for larger size)
Tecumseh, and
the War of 1812
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