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| Volume 4, No. 2 |
1654: First Mention of
the Eno Indians
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1976 |
This complicated narrative, written when Raleigh's fort was still standing
at Roanoke, shows how the English bargained sharply with the coastal Indians
for three great rivers and explains their fear of inland Carolina.
In September last, a young man, a trader for beavers, being bound out to
the adjacent parts to trade, by accident his sloop left him; and he, supposing
she had been gone to Rhoanoke, hired a small boat, and with one of his
company left with him came to crave my licence to go to look after his
sloop, and sought some relief of provisions of me; the which granting,
he set forth with three more in company, one being of my family, the
others were my neighbors.
They entered in at Caratoke, ten leagues to the southward of Cape Henry,
and so went to Rhoanoke island; where, or near thereabouts, they found the
great commander of those parts with his Indians a hunting, who received them
civilly, and shewed them the ruins of Sir Walter Ralegh's fort, from whence
I received a sure token of their being there. After some days spent to and
fro in the country, the young man the interpreter prevailed with the great
man, and his war-captains, and a great man of another province, and some
other Indians, to come in and make their peace with the English, which they
willingly condescended unto; and for the favour and relief I extended to
the interpreter in his necessity, in gratitude he brought them to me at my
house, where they abode a week, and shewed much civility of behaviour. In
the interim of which time, hearing and seeing the children read and write,
of his own free voluntary motion he asked me, (after a most solid pause,
we two being alone), whether I would take his only son, having but one, and
teach him to do as our children, namely in his terms, to speak out of the
book, and to make a writing; which motion I most heartily embraced; and with
expressions of love, and many presents, crediting with cloaths, dismissed
him. At his departure he expressed himself desirous to serve that God the
Englishmen served, and that his child might be so brought up; promising to
bring him in to me in four moons, in which space my occasions calling me
to Maryland, he came once himself, and sent twice to know, if I was returned,
that he might bring his child; but in my absence, some people, supposing
I had great gains by commerce with him, murmured, and carried themselves
uncivilly towards them, forbidding their coming in any more; and by some
over-busy justices of the place, (my wife having brought him to church in
the congregation), after sermon, threatened to whip him, and send him away.
The great man was very much afraid, and much appalled; but my wife kept him
in her hand by her side, and confidently and constantly on my behalf resisted
their threatenings, till they publickly protested against me for bringing
them in; but she worthily engaged my whole fortunes for any damage should
arise by or from them, till my return; which falling out presently after,
I having by the way taken my brother in with me for the better prosecution
of so noble a design, immediately I dispatched away a boat with six hands,
one being a carpenter, to build the king an English house, my promise at
his coming first, being to comply in that matter. I sent 200 sterling
in trust, to purchase and pay for what land they should like, the which in
little time they effected, and purchased, and paid for three great rivers,
and also all such others as they should like of southerly; and in solemn
manner took possession of the country, in the name, and on the behalf,
of the commonwealth of England; and actual possession was solemnly given
them by the great commander, and all the great men of the rest of the provinces,
in delivering them a turf of the earth with an arrow shot into it; and so
the Indians totally left the lands and rivers to us, retiring to a new habitation,
where our people built the great commander a fair house, the which I am to
furnish with English utensils and chattels. In the interim, whilst the house
was building for the great emperor of Rhoanoke, he undertook with some of
his Indians, to bring some of our men to the emperor of the Tuskarorawes,
and to that purpose sent embassadors before, and with two of our company
set forth and travelled within two days journey of the place, where at a
-hunting quarter the Tuskarorawes emperor, with 250 of his men, met our company,
and received them courteously; and after some days spent, desired them
to go to his chief town, where he told them was one Spaniard residing, who
had been seven years with them, a man very rich, having about thirty in family,
seven whereof are negroes; and he had one more negro, leiger with a great
nation called the Newxes. He is sometimes, they say, gone from thence a pretty
while. Our people had gone, but that the interpreter with overtravelling
himself fell sick; yet the Tuskarorawe proffered him, if he would go, he
would in three days journey bring him to a great salt sea, and to places
where they had copper out of the ground, the art of refining which they have
perfectly; for our people saw much amongst them, and some plates of a foot
square. There was one Indian had two beads of gold in his ears, big as rounceval
peas; and they said, there was much of that not far off. These allurements
had drawn them thither, but for the interpreter's weakness, and the war,
that was between a great nation called the Cacores, a very little people
in stature, not exceeding youths of thirteen or fourteen years, but extremely
valiant and fierce in fight, and above belief swift in retirement and flight,
whereby they resist the puissance of this potent, rich, and numerous
people. There is another great nation by these, called the Haynokes, who
valiantly resist the Spaniards further northern attempts. . . .
Your true honourer, and affectionate servant to be commanded,
Francis Yardly
For the worpshipfull John Farrer, Esq; at his manner of Little
Gidding in Huntingdonshire
—Salley, A. S., ed., Narratives of Early Carolina, 1650-1708, 1911.
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