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Philibert, Joseph - Delaware Town
Philibert, Joseph - Delaware Town
Delaware Town in 1820
DELAWARE TOWN – fifteen miles southwest of Springfield,
Missouri.
The Lenape-Delaware Presence in Southwest Missouri
ca.1820-ca.1830.
From 1820 to 1830, when the first white settlers came into the
region that now comprises Christian County, the only settlement of any
consequence in the entire area that is now southwest Missouri was Delaware
Town. It consisted of the James
Fork Trading Post (named so because it was situated on the James Fork of the
White River), several homes, a warehouse, a building where cheese was made (all
these structures were made of logs), several hen houses and corn cribs, the
many lodges of the Delaware Indians who resided in the village of the principal
chief of the tribe, Captain William Anderson, and a large horse-racing track
where the Delawares raced their mounts and wagered on the outcome.
This was all situated on the main trail through the area at the
time, the Delaware Trail, which later became known as the White River Trace.
The trail forded the James River upriver from the present-day Highway 14
bridge, one of the first two bridges in the county was installed at the site in
the late 1880s. That wooden structure was replaced by a metal truss bridge in
1904, but6 has since been removed entirely. No access to the river is now
available at the site, but a nearby graveyard is named the Delaware Cemetery.
…by 1818, the advancing tide of settlers forced them to sign
another treaty which would locate them on new lands in what is now Christian
County. In return the US
government agreed to pay the tribe an annual annuity in silver totaling $4000,
give them 120 horses, and provide them with a government-employed blacksmith. Thirteen hundred and forty-six
Delawares and their fourteen hundred horses were ferried across the Mississippi
River in the summer of 1820 to take up residence on the new lands, which had
been chosen for them by General William Clark of Lewis & Clark fame.
Other villages strung out along the banks of the James River
were those of Captain Ketchum (Whose Lenape name was Tah-whee-lalen), Capt.
Pipe (who was of the wolf clan), Capt. Patterson (Meshe Kowhay), Capt. Beaver
(who was of the turkey clan), Natcoming and Suwaunock (Chief Anderson’s son).
The whites in the Delaware Town area at this time were William
Gilliss (who owned the trading post and also had one on the banks of Swan Creek
near what is now Forsyth), Joseph Philibert (who worked for Gilliss a the James
Fork Trading Post), William Myres (who clerked for Gilliss at the Swan Creek
Trading Post), James and Phoebe Pool (he was the government-paid blacksmith for
the Delawares), Richard Graham (Indian Agent), John Campbell (Indian
sub-agent), William Marshall (a competing trader who also built a crude mill on
the Finley River near its mouth), James Wilson (competing trader who was
located on the banks of the creek that would come to bear his name) and Solomon
Yokum )who was ordered off the reservation by Campbell for selling whiskey to
the Delawares).
There were also several slaves belonging to Gilliss who served
as cooks and cheese makers. In addition, Baptiste Peoria, who was part Indian
and part African, served as an interpreter and guide for Gilliss.
William Gilliss, the most successful of the traders, lived in a
double-pen, dog-trot log house at Delaware town. Twice a year he’d dispatch
Philibert and a helper to drive two wagons to the town of Ste. Genevieve on the
Mississippi River to pick up supplies. It would take them 15 days to get there
and much longer to return loaded down with trade goods.
The Delawares used their annual annuity from the government,
paid in silver (one theory has it that Solomon Yokum, after being kicked off
the reservation, melted down this silver specie to form his own Yokum dollars
in order to hide the fact that he was still selling whiskey to the Indians) to
purchase trade goods. By the time
they had come to Delaware Town, they had adopted many of the European ways of
living, In addition to breechcloths, they wore white men’s clothing, used metal
tools an d hunted with rifles. While some lived in the traditional rounded
lodges made from tree limbs, brush, cedar boughs and animal hides, others
resided in log cabins, with a dirt floor and a hole in the of to allow smoke
from the cook-fire to escape.
William Gilliss followed the Delawares to Kansas after they
signed the 1829 James Fork Treaty that removed them even further west. Their
new lands were situated near the Missouri River, Gilliss became a wealthy man
and was one of the founders of Kansas City. By
the end of 1830, the Delawares had left southwest Missouri. Looking at a map
drawn by surveyor John C. Sullivan in 1824, it appears that the Delaware lands
(stretching 70 miles east to west and e44 miles north to south) covered most of
Christian County, as well as Stone and a portion of Taney, Barry, and Lawrence
counties. During its heyday, the Delaware Town settlement was the place of
importance in the Missouri Ozarks…
Date | 28 Aug 2013 |
Linked to | PHILIBERT JOSEPH, II |
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