by Tom Castaldi
Kekionga in today’s Lakeside
neighborhood where the Three Rivers meet was once the site of an American
Indian settlement established long before Europeans wandered through the area. Kekionga was actually a collection of
villages that now make up present-day Lakeside
neighborhood and was a center of the Miami
nation in historic times. Miami people were first
discovered in 1654 living in the Green
Bay, Wisconsin area
by the Europeans exploring North America, far
from their native lands of the lower Great Lakes. The Miami
and many other tribes of the region had been pushed out of their homelands by
their enemies from the east. These were the Iroquois who had been heavily armed
by the Dutch and English and were encouraged to attack the western Indians
likely to be friendly with their French rivals.
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You can learn more about the Miami at the Chief Richardville House, a national historic landmark. Check our website for information on programs coming up May-November at "the house". |
It was a natural place for people to come
together. To the west is the short land
bridge, or portage, between the Three Rivers system that eventually flows to
the Atlantic.
In the opposite direction the Wabash
system flows into the Ohio,
the Mississippi
and the Gulf of Mexico as well as to points
west that were explored by Lewis and Clark.
Serving as the portage, also known as the carrying place, travelers
could transport their cargos from one river passage to the next.
Stories about activities at Kekionga have been
preserved such as the especially interesting one about a remarkable woman. Her Miami
name Tacumwah, meaning “the water-bird”, was sometimes substituted with her
baptismal name which was Marie Louise.
Tacumwah was perhaps the most important woman among the Miami people, during the time of the wars
between the American Indians and the United States. The conflict fought was for control of the
Three Rivers region during the years 1778 to 1813. One source refers to Tacumwah as a
“Chiefess.” By her lineage were
descended the future chiefs of the Miami
nation. Her husband was Antoine Joseph
Drouet de Richardville, a French officer and fur trader from the Troi Riveres
settlement in Canada.
A very successful businesswoman, Tacumwah owned a
trading post west of Kekionga near the beginning of the portage where she conducted
a lucrative business providing porters, carts, packhorses, and supplies to
those crossing between the Saint Mary’s and the Wabash rivers. She passed her prestige, wealth and business
on to her son, Pechewa – the man we have come to know as Jean Baptiste de
Richardville – chief of the Miami
from 1813 until his death in 1841.
Tacumwah gave birth to Pechewa near an old apple tree
somewhere west of the Saint Joseph River, in
the village of Kekionga. This tree, with its trunk alleged to have
measured twelve feet in circumference, became a lively part of local tradition. It was an early example in the area of a
European tree foreign to North America and it
played an interesting role during the siege of 1812.
According to a story recounted in the mid-nineteenth
century, an Indian warrior climbed the ancient apple tree every day for several
days to harass the soldiers in the fort, but, finally, a marksman in the
garrison felled the taunting brave with an amazing musket shot measuring many
hundreds of yards. So popular were the
local legends about the tree that George Winter, an important itinerant painter
of the 1830s and 1840s, was enticed to made a sketch of it that survives to
this day. Author and historian Wallace
Brice saw fit to include a drawing of the old apple tree, as one of a very few
illustrations, in his 1868 History of
Fort Wayne book. It’s a pretty good
drawing too and worth a visit to the library to check it out.
Originally published in Fort Wayne
Magazine “Along the Heritage Trail with Tom Castaldi”
March 2008 No. 41
Allen County
Historian Tom Castaldi is author of the Wabash & Erie Canal Notebook
series; hosts “On the Heritage Trail,” which is broadcast at 6:35 a.m., 8:35
a.m. and 6:30 p.m. Mondays on WBOI, 89.1 FM; and “Historia Nostra” heard on
WLYV-1450 AM and WRRO 89.9 FM. Enjoy his previously published columns on the
History Center’s blog, “Our Stories,” at history centerfw.blogspot.com.
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