5 Odd Facts About the Difficult, Tortured History of Virginia Indians – Indian Country Media Network

Featuring Carrie Buck, yeah. (Why the State of Virginia Sterilized Carrie Buck — The Eugenics Movement and Buck vs. Bell)

My great-grandmother knew her when she was in a “foster care” placement in our town. (Read: farming out poor kids as domestic servants.) Not sure if it was the same placement where she got pregnant by rape, or not.

They were about the same age, and Granny Lu was lucky she didn’t end up as the big eugenics test case herself after my Papaw was born when she was 14. (Also from rape.) Having family backup and no state involvement was the big difference there, AFAICT. But, this hits pretty close to home in multiple ways.

(More on Virginia’s history of eugenics, with laws on the books up into the ‘70s. )

5 Odd Facts About the Difficult, Tortured History of Virginia Indians – Indian Country Media Network

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How the West Was Won – Kill the Bison, Conquer the Indians

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A lot of people forget about the Eastern subspecies, but they were very important too.

Often associated only with the Great Plains of the American West, bison were once numerous east of the Mississippi, and were once common in West Virginia. The town of Buffalo, WV, was named after Buffalo Creek, so named because bison were commonly seen along it. Dr. Thomas Walker recorded that 13 buffaloes were killed during the his 1743 expledition of the trans-Allegheny region.

The Native Americans of West Virginia made use of the bison for food, clothing, bedding, war paraphernalia (shields made from hides), utensils, and musical instruments (trumpets made from horns, drum skins from hide.)

Although valued as a source of food by white settlers, many engaged in the wanton killing of bison as as a “sport.” Dr. Walker noted in 1743 that, “game in these parts and would have been of much greater advantage to the inhabitants than it has been if the hunters had not killed the Buffaloes for diversion.”

The bison once roamed in large herds over the entire state, the greatest number of them being found along the Ohio and Kanawha rivers. By 1730, all the wild bison were gone from Virginia and by 1760 they had were no longer found in the Carolinas or eastern Georgia. Daniel Boone wrote in his diary that he hunted buffalo in North Carolina until they “became scarce” in the late 1760’s.

The last buffalo seen in West Virginia were a cow and calf in Webster County in the year 1825. The last wild bison living east of the Mississippi River was shot in 1832.

Bison: Builder of Roads

White hunters and early settlers in the trans-Allegheny region reported sizable populations of bison, that had beaten down traces or paths between salt licks. Many of these paths served as roads that used by Indians, and later by the white settlers. Many decades later, the paths of the bison became the route followed by many of the early turnpikes and road systems.

(The West Virginia Cyclopedia)

What’s referenced as Virginia there AFAICT was the limits of the colony at that time, which had not yet expanded west of the Blue Ridge. I am from the New/Kanawha/Ohio drainage, just over the current WV state line, and close to places named after that Dr. Walker (and buffalo place names)–where they held on for almost a century longer as mentioned above. Until after there were larger numbers of settlers and just groups of destructive roving assholes killing them off.

My folks also used to make boats covered with the large, tough hides, which would hold up better to rapids better than wood. Deer skins don’t work for that. Neither would elk probably, but they also got totally wiped out at about the same time anyway.

Did run across this one, though, so bringing it back.