The Indian Era
"If I were an Indian, I'd sit under this oak tree
waiting for game." Assistant Chief Naturalist Bruce McHenry got nods of
agreement from the group of visitors he had led out along the quartzite
backbone of Rocky Mountain. Along the way, he had told them how Indians
once used these ridges as sources of stone for weapon points and, no
doubt, as lookouts. Now, having absorbed the view from a projecting
outcrop and having tried to imagine themselves Indians, the hikers were
filing back toward Skyline Drive. The naturalist had hardly made his
comment about sitting under the oak tree when he suddenly stopped, bent
down, and with a triumphant smile picked up a perfect quartz arrowhead.
In one instant the yesteryear he had been trying to evoke became real.
The walk was "made." That night at the campfire program they were still
talking about it. One man teased McHenry: "You really planted it there,
didn't you?"
Such finds are not unusual. Around Big Meadows, on
Lewis Mountain and Tanner's Ridge, at Hawksbill and Pinefield Gaps, and
in many other places, arrowheads, spear points, stone knives and other
clues confirm the long use of the Blue Ridge by Indians. The nature of
these tools further tells us that the Blue Ridge was primarily a hunting
ground, rather than a place of settlement. Aside from one fragment of a
pot (indicating food or water storage) found in a rock shelter on
Madison Run, and some burial mounds (suggesting the site of a village)
found near Jarman Gap, there is no evidence that Indians established
other than temporary hunting camps in these mountains. And this use of
the land is not surprising. It was only natural that the Indians should
choose the lowlands, with both fertile soil and an equable climate, for
settlement.
Big Meadows was an important hunting ground for the
Indians. (Photo by Hugh Crandall)
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The tide of man's migration into North America
(apparently by way of the Bering land bridge) reached the Shenandoah
area at least 10,000 and perhaps 13,000 years ago. For the first 9,000
or more years of their existence here, the Indians were hunters and
gatherers, moving to wherever they could find food. About 3,000 years
ago, they learned how to make clay pottery. Then, about 1,000 years ago,
the revolutionary discovery, made by tribes in Mexico, that food plants
could be domesticated and raised at chosen places finally reached the
Indians of Shenandoah. At about the same time, they learned the use of
bow and arrow. After these culture-shaking introductions, hunting,
fishing, and gathering of wild foods gradually became supplementary
activities carried on from their villages near fields of corn, squash,
gourds, and beans.
The Valley and Piedmont scene in late Indian days, as
reported by early explorers, was a patchwork of fields and forests,
perhaps not greatly different from today's pattern. The open places were
gardens, some dotted with the stubs of girdled and burned trees, and
grassy expanses made by Indian fires and perhaps by the filling in of
beaver ponds. Herds of elk and bison grazed on the manmade savannas.
Though his lowland environment was fruitful, the Indian still saw value
in the mountains rising above him. Following game trails, he easily
gained the upper elevations, where he hunted deer, bear, and elk. As in
the valleys, he found that he could encourage and concentrate game by
burning the forest on some of the more level mountaintops, producing
grassy openings dotted with berry bushes and small trees.
Artifacts found in Madison Run Rock Shelter show that
the cave was used by Indians. (Photo by E. R. Shaffner)
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Such a place was Big Meadows. The open expanse one
now looks out upon from Byrd Visitor Center probably owes its origin to
Indian fires. In the early morning or evening hours, we can easily
imagine a bronze form behind a tree at the edge of the meadow, pulling
back a bowstring and sending an arrow into a grazing buck. With a little
more effort, we can see a line of braves following a great circle of
fire around the meadow, driving a milling herd of terrified animals to
their death.
In our day of swarming population and all-powerful
technology, we rightfully worry about man's relationship with his
environment. Is he destroying it, and himself with it? And sometimes we
wonder if our predecessors had better ways of living with the land.
Indians, it is safe to conclude, lived with the Blue Ridge for centuries
without destroying it, all that time drawing food, clothing, and shelter
from its many forms of life. They had, of course, some constraints built
into their way of life that we don't have. One was a low density of
population, which was dictated by high death rates, the difficulty of
storing surplus food, and perhaps self-imposed limits on their numbers.
Another constraint was the nature of the tools they had to work with:
bows, hoes, and stone axes certainly can't compete with guns, tractors,
and bulldozers as resourceexploiting implements. (Fire, in their
hands, could be considered productive rather than destructive,
maintaining grass and shrubs but not burning deeply into the soil.) The
Indians were thus too few and too ill-equipped to have long-term
deleterious effects on the land. But though their situation and ours are
not really comparable, we can still learn from them. We can learn, as
Indians did from direct dependence on the natural world, to understand
and respect the many forms of life and their environments. For our
dependence, though obscured by the complex organization of modern
society, is no less real.
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