Lands of the Wyandot Indians
Both myth and tradition of the Wyandots say they were "created" in the region
between St. James's Bay and the coast of Labrador. All their traditions describe
their ancient home as north of the mouth of the St. Lawrence.
In their traditions of their migrations southward they say they came to the
island where Montreal now stands. They took possession of the country along the
north bank of the St. Lawrence from the Ottawa River to a large lake and river
far below Quebec.
On the south side of the St. Lawrence lived the Senecas, so the Wyandot
traditions recite. The Senecas claimed the island upon which the city of
Montreal is built. The Senecas and Wyandots have always claimed a cousin
relation with each other. They say that they have been neighbors from time
immemorial. Their languages are almost the same, each being the dialect of an
older common mother-tongue. They are as nearly alike as are the Seneca and
Mohawk dialects. The two tribes live side by side at this time, and each can
speak the tongue of the other as well as it speaks its own.
When the Wyandots came to the St. Lawrence, and how long they remained there,
cannot now be determined. Their traditions say that they were among those that
met Cartier at Hochelaga in 1535. According to their traditions, Hochelaga was a
Seneca town.
It had been the opinion of writers upon the subject that the Wyandots migrated
from the St. Lawrence directly to the point where they were found by the French.
Whatever the fact may be, their traditions tell a different story. Their route
was up the St. Lawrence, which they crossed, and along the south shore of Lake
Ontario. They held this course until they arrived at the Falls of Niagara, where
they settled and remained for some years.
The Wyandots removed from the Falls of Niagara, the site now occupied by
Toronto, Canada. Their removal from Niagara was in consequence of the Iroquois
coming into their historic seat in what is now New York. This settlement they
called by their word which means "plenty," or "a land of plenty." They named it
so because of the abundance of game and fish they found, and of the abundance of
corn, beans, squashes and tobacco they raised. The present name of that city is
only a slight change of the old Wyandot name, which was pronounced "To-run-to."
As the Iroquois pushed farther westward, the Wyandots became uneasy because of
former wars with them and finally abandoned their country at Toronto and
migrated northward. Here they came in contact with the Hurons, who tried to
expel them, but were unable to do so. The French found them in alliance with the
Hurons, but record that they had but recently been at war with that people. When
the Jesuits went among the Hurons the Wyandots were a part of the Huron
Confederacy. Their history from this point is well known.
If it turns out that there is any reliance to be placed in the traditions of the
Wyandots, they were found in their historic seat about one hundred and five
years from the time they were first seen by the French at Montreal in 1535.
Their migration from the St. Lawrence, by way of the Niagara Falls and Toronto
to the Blue Mountains on the shores of the Nottawassaga Bay, occurred after the
French first came to Canada.
The Wyandots were involved in the general ruin wrought by the Iroquois.
The Wyandots came to Kansas from Upper Sandusky, Ohio, in the summer of 1843.
They stopped about Westport, Mo., and some of them camped on the south and east
side of the Kansas River north of the Shawnee line, the land being now in Kansas
City, Kansas. By the terms of the treaty made at Upper Sandusky, March 17, 1842,
the Wyandots were given one hundred and forty-eight thousand acres of land, to
be located in the Indian country which became Kansas. The lands there to be had
did not suit them. Their reservation was located on the Neosho. They were far
advanced toward civilization, and did not wish to live so far from a civilized
community. They had attempted to purchase a strip of land seven miles wide by
twenty-five miles long adjoining the State of Missouri from the Shawnee, but
that tribe finally refused to sell. The Wyandots justly complained that they had
given both the Shawnees and Delawares homes in Ohio, and now neither tribe
really desired to sell them a home in the West. But the Delawares did, at length
sell them thirty-nine sections in the fork of the Kansas and Missouri rivers,
now the eastern part of Wyandotte County, for forty-eight thousand dollars. They
moved on this tract in the winter of 1843-44.
The first Mission ever founded in the world by the Methodist Episcopal Church
was among the Wyandots at Upper Sandusky. This mission was brought bodily to
Kansas by the Wyandots. It is now the Washington Avenue Methodist Episcopal
Church, Kansas City, Kansas. The division in the Methodist Episcopal Church
caused dissension in the Wyandot nation, and the Church South, in that Nation,
organized at that time. This Church also is an active organization in Kansas
City, Kansas, at this time. This author had in his collection of historical
papers the records of the Sandusky Mission and the documents relating to the
separation of the Church in Kansas.
By treaty concluded by the Wyandots with the United States at Washington, D. C.,
January 31, 1855, they dissolved their tribal relations and became citizens of
the United States. They took their lands in severalty, and the entire
reservation was surveyed and allotted to the members of the tribe as citizens.
The titles to the land held in Wyandotte County are based on the U. S. patents
to these allotments. The towns of Armstrong, Armourdale, Wyandotte, and old
Kansas City, Kansas, were consolidated by act of the legislature into the
present Kansas City, Kansas.
The unsettled times in Kansas prior to and during the Civil War worked hardship on many of the Wyandots. They lost their property and became very poor. By treaty made February 23, 1867, the Government provided a reservation of twenty thousand acres of land on the Neosho, in what is now Oklahoma, for these Wyandots. They immediately gathered there and resumed their tribal relations. Most of the Wyandot people are now to be found there.
