WiC rm$ riU itltflD.l A3 VOL. I., NO. 22. PINEHURST, N. C, FRIDAY, MARCH 11, 1898. PRICE THREE CENTS. 111 11 IV 1 I HISTORICAL LECTURE. Gen. Carrington Tells of North Carolina in Olden Times. Many Fine Stereopticon Views Used to Illustrate the Address. An Appreciative Audience Fills the Village Hall and Enjoys the Entertainment. Early i the season our distinguished winter resident, (Jen. II. B. Carrington, kindly consented to favor the people of our village with a historical lecture on the Old North State and its Indian tind Revolutionary antecedents, and our vil lagers have been impatiently awaiting the date assigned to it. The general i well known throughout the country as a historical writer, and his personal sur veys of the battlefields of this state and a study of American and British archives relating to tnem make mm peculiarly well lilted to deal with this subject in an in teresting and instructive manner. Last, evening was the appointed time, and a large audience gathered in the Vil lage Hall in anticipation of the promised mental feast. 'Ihe general was in his happiest vein and held the close atten tion of those present throughout the evening. The address was largely in the form of a familar talk a style that is peculiarly pleasing to our people, and in keeping with the delightfully semi-formal character of the Pinehurst entertain ments and was replete with interesting facts. A large number of stereoptican views of Indians and Indian life that were taken by the general during hi visits among the several tribes of red men, were thrown upon the screen with goodelfect. The entertainment was one of the pleasantest in the series of rinehurst evening recreations and the orators efforts met with the warm approval of all those who had the good fortune to at tend. Below we give the address in full. "We are gathered in this beautiful hall from many sections, Canada included, for rest, recuperation and health. Hut I do not propose to dwell upon the climatic features of the Old North State, nor to usurp the place of your medical confident ami intimate that you will find the true elixir of lengthened life in the aroma of its pines or the fragrance of its llora which are so grateful and refreshing. My purpose is simply to illustrate in a familar manner some of the incidents Which impart significance to its early history. Unlike all other Atlantic coasts, its seaboard was so cut by inlets from the ocean and fringed bv sub-marine shoals, that its chief intercourse with C.reat Hritian and the West Indies was largely through the ports of Norfolk, Virginia, ami Charleston, South Carolina, The adventurous Sir Walter Hileigh and Sir Humphrey (Jilbert, between the years 1578 and 1584, and of associated ex plorers immediately after, established permanent settlements, and its Capital city still honors the memory of its pio neer founder. Hut the spirit of adventure which characterized those pioneers re vealed to the people of Kngland a region of such equable climate and such variety of production upon the land and in rivers and adjacent waters, as to secure for per manent occupation and settlement a population of sturdy, conscientious and liberty-loving people who have ever left their impress upon its development and growth. The (Quaker, the Baptist, ami the Presbyterian, who had been sub jected to persecution elsewhere, appre ciated a land of toleration and independ ence. Even the stately forms of the Rinehurst, I am able to introduce them to your visible acquaintance; hrielly stating that the Eastern Hand of Chero kees own and occupy sixty-live thous.ind acres in the counties of Cherokee, (Jra h :m, .Jackson and Swayne, where lofty mountains, narrow valleys, and purest springs and rivulets are well known by tourists and special visitors, ::s the "Land of the Sky." The present population is 2,Jcs", of which 1,520 reside upon the lands mentioned. In (ieorgia there are 080; in Tennessee .'518, and in Alabama 111 of the Eastern Hand of Cherokees. Coin ponies A and H of the 0!)th North Caro tin i regiment in the Confederate service 1 -01-05 came from this band, of whom nearly thirty or their widows survive. ILLUSTRATIONS. CUHHOKKKS. Principal Chief, Nimrod .1. Smith, (Cha la 1 i hil)) "Charles the killer." Group, Rev. .John Jackson, Morgan Calhoun, William Ta la lah, ami Wesley. Group, Chiefs of Council. Group, Jesse lieed ami standing Deer. mK.h pfeTjg hi '.. '. I ' . tiii; ' 1 1 i wi:.' ii 1 1 I English church found tardy welcome. Hie old stock planted the mountains and valleys with precious seed;' and the names of families and towns with which we. are now familar are full of glorious antecedents and spirited suggestions of i successful struggle for both civil mid religious liberty. I shall endeavor to illustrate by the tereopticon two phases only of North 'arolina history. Aside from the jeal ousies of adventurers and the local politi- al differences which are common to all new countries, North Carolina shared rith other colonies a protracted contest ,ith the Indian occupants of the soil, for the establishment of safe and per manent homes. And it is one of the pe euliarities of North Carolina history, that nth the exception of the Catawbas, the id Indian tribes which gave her the most trouble still retain their indepen dence upon lands of their own, and com pete with the white man in the exercise of civilized life. In olliciai visits to the Cherokees and the Tuscaroras, entering every houe, 1 as able to secure representative pic tures of living descendants of the origin- proprietors of the Old North State. Through the skill and artistic taste of Mr. Arthur C. Butler, the electrician ot Hryson City Court House, Swaine County. Donaldson Kidge ami (Jap. Group, Climbing RearandChief Smith's family. Group, James Rlvthe, son in law of Chief Smith, ami Sampson George ; Mount Noble in the distance. Valley of Ihe Soco. Trout tishing. Soco School House. "Old Rig Witch" at home. Councillor Wesley Crow at home. The "Hypocrite School House," Rirdtown. "The Chapel Oak," Rirdtown. An open grist mill. A closed grist mill. flowing with a heifer. The "Mulberry Hand Stand." Cherokee Training School and Hand. "But the most warlike and wisest In dians of North America were the Iro quois tribes; then, as ever since, occupy ing both banks of the St. Lawrence river and parts of New York. They were so organized and so prolific in schemes for aggrandizement that Park man says of this people, "If Europeans had not settled in New Englind, it is most likely that the Iroquois would have exterminated interior tribes of red men." The "Hiawatha," of Longfellow, was not a mythical character. He was the "wise man"' of this great people. Through his agency the Iroquois con federacy was established. From its sys tem Thomas Jefferson caught the frame work of the American Constitution. Each of the tribes, or nations, was i ml Im pendent of all others in its local affairs ; while one general council or congress of chiefs, selected by the mothers in each tribe or nation, administered all affairs which required of the confederacy its support whenever either tribe or nation was threatened from without. The Tus caroras, belonging to this great family, drifted down the Mississippi and took lodgement at the headwaters of the Neuse and Tar rivers in North Carolina. Overpowered by the increasing numbers and better arms of the whites, they re moved to the banks of the J'oanoke. In 1717 they removed to New York. They sold their lands in North Carolina, and appropriated 1:1,722 of the proceeds to purchase land in New York. In 1722 they were formally admitted by their Iroquois kinsmen, into the confederacy; and the "Five Nations" became the ".Six Nations'' of Revolutionary times and ever since. They now own and culti vate to the highest perfection, and with the use of all the latest machinery, 0,24!) acres only a few miles from Niagara Falls, having their own churches and be ing absolutely independent, through the government of their chiefs, of all exter nal authority, except as to crimes com mitted against the laws of New York, or those of the United States. They are Christian, generally speak English, and their churches, especially the Baptist, are well maintained, with good houses of worship with musical accompaniments in which they are prolicient. The widow of their greatest modern chief, Mrs. Caroline Mnuntplcasant, (Je-keah-saw-sa, (the Peace (ueen of the Senecas) sister of the late (General Porter of (i rant's stall', afterwards a police com missioner of New York City, lived among this nation until her recent de cease. She was a woman of rare cul ture, dignity and grace, eilicient in Sun day school work, and in all forms of social benevolence. Her picture, taken at her residence, illustrates her charac ter. The present population of the Tus caroras is 780, of which number 287 live on Orand river, Canada. It is of interest to all students of Indian history to notice this remarkable fact as to the Iroqouis, viz: that their estimated numbers in 1000, Canada included, was 11,000; in lG'Jf) increased to 12,850; in 1700, after the destructive waste of the French and Revolutionary wars, only 7,430; but in 181J0 there were 15,870 as the result of civilization and peace. There is now a small net annual increase. It is also proper to add that the Cherokees them selves are to be credited to Iroquois stock. ILLUSTRATION'S. Caroline Mountpleasant, (Ge-keah saw-su) the Peace Queen ol the Senecas. TCSC AUOH AS. Thomas Williams, (So ker-yer ter) President. Daniel Printup, (De-gua ter-anh) Treasurer. Luther W. Jack, (Ta-wer-de quoit) Clerk. Elias Johnson, (Tower na kee) Historian. Grand Mountpleasant, (No mi kn-wa) Sachen Chief.